Maksimilijan Vanka
Maxo Vanka | |
---|---|
Vanka in 1946 | |
Born |
Maksimilijan Vanka 11 October 1889 Zagreb, Austria-Hungary |
Died |
2 February 1963 73) Puerto Vallarta, Mexico | (aged
Nationality | Croatian/American |
Known for | Painting |
Maksimilijan "Maxo" Vanka (October 11, 1889 – February 2, 1963) was a Croatian-American artist.
Biography
Vanka was born in Croatia in 1889. He was sent to live with peasants, but at the age of eight was discovered by his maternal grandfather and sent to live in a castle. He studied art in Zagreb, Croatia and Brussels, Belgium. During World War I, he served with the Belgian Red Cross, because he was a pacifist and would not serve in the regular army. He taught art in Zagreb, but went to America in the 1930s with his wife, Margaret Stetten Vanka, and their daughter, Peggy.
Vanka's most important works are his Millvale Murals in the St. Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church, the first Croatian Catholic parish in the United States, in Millvale, Pennsylvania, which depict Christ and Mary in images of war and offer social commentary on world events like fascism, war, and poverty. Murals painted before the war depict Croatian immigrants coming to America to seek a better life, grateful to have escaped the slaughter taking place in their homeland. This was Vanka's [sic] "Mothers offer up their sons for labor" theme, a tribute to all those who worked diligently in the mills and mines in and around Pittsburgh. One mural depicts the fire and collapse of one of the coal burning mills and as a Croatian mother cradles her dead son, her other three sons rush into the mill to save their fellow workers and are killed. A committed pacifist, the intensity of Vanka's beliefs are depicted clearly in post-war murals. One is of the Virgin Mary coming between two warring soldiers. Another depicts two soldiers battling each other, yet this time it is Jesus who attempts to intercede and one of the soldiers accidentally thrusts his bayonet into Jesus' heart.
Career, death & legacy
Vanka was memorialized in Gift to America, a play written in 1981 by Professor David P. Demarest of Carnegie Mellon University. Vanka taught art at a community college in Bucks County, Pennsylvania at the end of his life. He died swimming off the coast of Puerto Vallarta in 1963.
He educate and learned Ambroz Testen watercolor painting techniques and he left great influence on his painting later.[1]
Legacy
The Society to Preserve the Millvale Murals of Maxo Vanka, founded in 1991 with the mission to preserve and maintain the murals, is leading a campaign to clean, restore and light the murals. SPMMMV also manages a docent program. Docent-led tours are available at St. Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church on Saturday and Sunday from 1:00pm – 4:00 pm.
On Easter Sunday 2012 the Pittsburgh-based band Action Camp released a short film setting one of their live performances of a musical suite against the Maxo Vanka murals that inspired it. This is one of only two performances of this work, that was performed in front of the Millvale Murals in the St. Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church. The band was commissioned to perform this suite in a collaboration called Hi-Rez.
References
- ↑ www.akademija-art.hr, Galery of Ambroz Testen, accessdate 14 July 2016 (Croatian)
External links
- Rome Away from Home: Masterpiece in Pennsylvania by Elizabeth Lev
- Off the Wall: The Murals of St. Nicholas -- Pittsburgh Quarterly
- The Murals of Maxo Vanka
- Pittsburgh Center for the Arts-Paintings and Works on Paper, Maxo Vanka
- The Society to Preserve the Millvale Murals of Maxo Vanka
- Murals for the Ages -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 4/25/2010
- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette multi-media view of the Millvale Murals of Maxo Vanka
- The Gift of Sympathy: the Art of Maxo Vanka
- St Nicholas Croatian Catholic Church in Millvale