Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q4893580> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 77 of
77
with 100 triples per page.
- Q4893580 description "American artist".
- Q4893580 description "American artist".
- Q4893580 subject Q10167125.
- Q4893580 subject Q6646943.
- Q4893580 subject Q7021195.
- Q4893580 subject Q8219370.
- Q4893580 subject Q8565995.
- Q4893580 abstract "Bernard Reder (29 June 1897 – 7 September 1963) was an artist, sculptor, etcher, engraver and architect, born in Czernowitz, Bukovina, (Chernivtsi, Bokovina) part of Austria before World War II and a centre of Jewish and Hasidic culture. His subjects were drawn from Jewish folklore, from Greek mythology, the Bible, and also from François Rabelais. Reder is quoted as having said, "We were born already drunk with fantasy", referring to his early life in Bukovina. The son of a Jewish innkeeper, at 17 he was conscripted into the Austrian army and spend World War I in the trenches. He went on to study at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague. While working on his sculptures in his spare time, he supported himself by carving cemetery monuments. He moved to Prague in 1930 because of anti-Semitic demonstrations. In 1935 Reder had his first solo exhibition at the gallery of Manes, an association of artists in Prague. This exhibition created a sensation and was widely published by newspapers in Prague, Paris, Wienna and Basel. Most sculptures were sold. Two years later, in 1937, he moved to Paris and became a good friend of the sculptor and painter Aristide Maillol. In 1940 he exhibited at the Wildenstein Gallery in Paris. Later that year, Reder was forced to flee Paris to escape from the Nazis, and Maillol secured a passage for him and his wife to travel to Spain, where he was imprisoned for illegal entry. On his release, they travelled to Havana, Cuba, where Reder influenced many artists. All the works in his Paris studio were later destroyed by the Germans. Reder arrived in New York City in 1943, but in 1945 he became partially paralysed by a serious illness, and concentrated more on woodcuts and drawings. He became an American citizen in 1948. He was shown regularly at the Whitney Museum and was shown at the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 1949. In 1954, Reder went to Italy to sculpt in Rome and Florence. In 1956, he was given a one-man exhibition at The Galleria d'Arte Moderno L'Indiano, Florence, which received much attention and acclaim from art historian John Rewald. In 1961 he was given a solo one-man retrospective exhibition show at the Whitney Museum and for the first time in its history the museum devoted three of its floors to a single artist.Bernard Reder died in 1963 in New York. His last four years were very productive, producing over thirty-five bronze sculptures. He created many of these directly in wax using a lost-wax casting technique he had learned in Italy.".
- Q4893580 birthDate "1897-06-29".
- Q4893580 birthPlace Q105206.
- Q4893580 birthPlace Q157725.
- Q4893580 birthPlace Q212.
- Q4893580 birthYear "1897".
- Q4893580 deathDate "1963-09-07".
- Q4893580 deathPlace Q1384.
- Q4893580 deathYear "1963".
- Q4893580 thumbnail Bernard-Reder,-Sitting-figure,-sandstone,-1930s.jpg?width=300.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q10167125.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q105206.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q131018.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q153920.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q1563.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q157725.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q1623314.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q171201.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q1716022.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q174.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q1845.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q188740.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q2044.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q212.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q214867.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q219555.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q22649.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q239303.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q34726.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q414009.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q510324.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q632682.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q639791.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646943.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q7021195.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q765814.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q8219370.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q8565995.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q90497.
- Q4893580 wikiPageWikiLink Q928357.
- Q4893580 birthDate "1897-06-29".
- Q4893580 birthPlace "Czernowitz, Bukovina, now Ukraine".
- Q4893580 dateOfBirth "1897-06-29".
- Q4893580 dateOfDeath "1963-09-07".
- Q4893580 deathDate "1963-09-07".
- Q4893580 deathPlace Q1384.
- Q4893580 name "Bernard Reder".
- Q4893580 name "Reder, Bernard".
- Q4893580 occupation "artist, sculptor, etcher, engraver and architect".
- Q4893580 placeOfBirth Q105206.
- Q4893580 placeOfBirth Q157725.
- Q4893580 placeOfDeath Q1384.
- Q4893580 shortDescription "American artist".
- Q4893580 type Person.
- Q4893580 type Agent.
- Q4893580 type Person.
- Q4893580 type Agent.
- Q4893580 type NaturalPerson.
- Q4893580 type Thing.
- Q4893580 type Q215627.
- Q4893580 type Q5.
- Q4893580 type Person.
- Q4893580 comment "Bernard Reder (29 June 1897 – 7 September 1963) was an artist, sculptor, etcher, engraver and architect, born in Czernowitz, Bukovina, (Chernivtsi, Bokovina) part of Austria before World War II and a centre of Jewish and Hasidic culture. His subjects were drawn from Jewish folklore, from Greek mythology, the Bible, and also from François Rabelais. Reder is quoted as having said, "We were born already drunk with fantasy", referring to his early life in Bukovina.".
- Q4893580 label "Bernard Reder".
- Q4893580 depiction Bernard-Reder,-Sitting-figure,-sandstone,-1930s.jpg.
- Q4893580 givenName "Bernard".
- Q4893580 name "Bernard Reder".
- Q4893580 name "Reder, Bernard".
- Q4893580 surname "Reder".