翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Stefan Kiesbye
・ Stefan Kießling
・ Stefan Kikov
・ Stefan Kimevski
・ Stefan Kindermann
・ Stefan Kirev
・ Stefan Kirmaier
・ Stefan Kisielewski
・ Stefan Kisyov
・ Stefan Klaverdal
・ Stefan Klein
・ Stefan Kleineheismann
・ Stefan Klinger
・ Stefan Klockare
・ Stefan Klos
Stefan Knapp
・ Stefan Kneer
・ Stefan Kobel
・ Stefan Kohn
・ Stefan Koković
・ Stefan Kolb
・ Stefan Kolev
・ Stefan Konstantin
・ Stefan Kopec
・ Stefan Korboński
・ Stefan Kossecki
・ Stefan Kostadinov
・ Stefan Koubek
・ Stefan Kovačević
・ Stefan Kozlov


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Stefan Knapp : ウィキペディア英語版
Stefan Knapp
Stefan Knapp (1921 – October 12, 1996) was a Polish born painter and sculptor, who worked in Great Britain.〔Cathy Knapp, "Stefan Knapp: A Visionary Artist Who Worked In Enamel", Glass on Metal: The Enamelist's Magazine, Volume 18, Number 3, October 1999, ()〕 He developed and patented a technique of painting with enamel paint on steel facilitating decorating public architectural structures.
Knapp was born in Biłgoraj. His father's name was Antoni and his mother was Julia, née Wnuk.
In 1935 he began studies at the Lwów Polytechnic. After the outbreak of World War II Soviet Union occupied Lwów, murdered Knapp's father and sent Stefan to a gulag in Siberia.〔New York Times, "Stefan Knapp, 75; Created Big Mural", October 20, 1996, ()〕 There, among other things, he worked building schools for Russian children who had been orphaned because their parents had been imprisoned or murdered for political reasons.〔Rochelle L. Millen, Jack Mann, Timothy Bennett, "New perspectives on the Holocaust", NYU Press, 1996, pg. 31, ()〕 While in the Gulag, because artistic endeavors were limited, he made chess sets out of bread and playing cards out of trash for his fellow prisoners.〔Biłgoraj City Webpage, "Stefan Knapp - wspomnienie o wybitnym artyście" (Stefan Knapp - memories of a great artist), accessed 31 May 2009, ()〕
He was released in 1942 after the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement was signed between Poland and Soviet Union.〔 He joined the Anders Army and volunteered for the air force, hence he was shipped to Great Britain. Knapp began his training as a pilot on 29 June 1942 in Hucknall.〔Wojciech Zmyślony, "Stefan Knapp" in "Polskie Sily Powietrzne w II Wojnie Swiatowej" (Polish Air Force During World War II), (), accessed 5/31/09〕 He served as an officer and Spitfire pilot in the Royal Air Force. While in the RAF Knapp pursued his art by painting or sketching portraits of his fellow pilots in the Squadron 318.〔 After the end of the war he remained in London and took advantage of a veteran's stipend to further his studies at the Royal Academy and at Slade School of Fine Art.〔(University for Creative Arts, "Stefan Knapp" )〕
His experience in the Gulag and as a RAF pilot caused him to suffer from recurring nightmares and insomnia for many years. Consequently, he used his art as a form of therapy. In the late 1940s this resulted in a series of works titled ''Gulag''. The works were noted for many experimental techniques.〔Stefan Knapp Biography, artnet, ().〕
Knapp was known for producing murals of unprecedented size with materials which were meant to last for thousands of years.〔 He first received wide attention and acclaim during his exhibition in London in 1954. There he presented a unique and innovative style and technique, which involved melting glass into pieces of light steel, using specially made furnaces.〔 Prior to finding fame he worked as a ski instructor in the Swiss Alps to make ends meet.〔
In the late 1950s Knapp moved away from traditional painting to experiments with enamel and sculpture. In the 1960s he painted several murals at the Heathrow Airport, which were later reinstalled in the 1990s. In the early 1950s he painted a mural in the foyer of Hallfield Primary School, Westminster which was designed by the architect Denys Lasdun. He also painted a mural for the Warsaw metro entitled ''The Battle of Britain''. Between 1954 and 1968 he held at least one exhibition each year, including ones in the Netherlands, Austria, and Peru. In 1972, he proposed an astronomy themed work for the Mikołaj Kopernik University of Toruń which was accepted. Knapp also designed many decorations for synagoguess, many of which he based on his memories of synagogues, kirkuts and Jewish prayer houses in his childhood town of Biłgoraj.〔
In the 1970s Knapp, together with his wife, moved to the British countryside, where he built a large furnace for his work. Knapp is also the author of the largest mural in the world, sized at 200⨯50 feet (about 60⨯15 metres), painted on the Alexander's department store building in Paramus, New Jersey.〔 The building has since been demolished and the mural is currently in storage.〔http://www.nj.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2015/05/alexanders_mural_carlstadt_mayor_paterson_art_fact.html#incart_river〕〔http://www.northjersey.com/news/iconic-alexander-s-department-store-mural-remains-in-limbo-1.411703〕
For his military service he was awarded the Virtuti Militari cross. Knapp was the only Pole to ever receive the Churchill Fellowship, which he used to study and expand his knowledge of murals in Guatemala, India, Iran, Japan and Mexico.〔 His other awards included the Knight's Cross of Polonia Restituta and the Cross of Valor. He was one of the best known Polish artists working in Great Britain. He wrote an autobiography "Kwadratowe Słońce" (The Square Sun) about his life in the Siberian gulag.
He died in 1996 at his studio in London, still working on his art. Thousands of people attended his funeral in London.〔
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Stefan Knapp」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.