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Wikipedia

Joseph Csaky

Joseph Csaky (also written Josef Csàky, Csáky József, József Csáky and Joseph Alexandre Czaky) (18 March 1888 – 1 May 1971) was a Hungarian avant-garde artist, sculptor, and graphic artist, best known for his early participation in the Cubist movement as a sculptor. Csaky was one of the first sculptors in Paris to apply the principles of pictorial Cubism to his art. A pioneer of modern sculpture,[1] Csaky is among the most important sculptors of the early 20th century.[2] He was an active member of the Section d'Or group between 1911 and 1914, and closely associated with Crystal Cubism, Purism, De Stijl, Abstract art, and Art Deco throughout the 1920s and 1930s.

Joseph Csaky
Joseph Csaky in 1926
Born
Csáky József

(1888-03-18)18 March 1888
Died1 May 1971(1971-05-01) (aged 83)
Paris, France
NationalityHungarian, French
Known forSculpture
Notable workGroupe de femmes (1911–1912), Danseuse (1912), Head (1912), Figure de Femme Debout, or Figure Habillée (1913), Head (Tête d'homme) (1913), Head (1914), Cones and Spheres (1919), Mother and Child (1926)
MovementCubism, Purism, De Stijl, Abstract art, Art Deco

Csaky fought alongside French soldiers during World War I and in 1922 became a naturalized French citizen. He was a founding member of l'Union des Artistes modernes (UAM) in 1929. During World War II, Csaky joined forces with the French underground movement (la Résistance) in Valençay. In the late 1920s, he collaborated with some other artists in designing furniture and other decorative pieces, including elements of the Studio House of the fashion designer Jacques Doucet.

After 1928, Csaky moved away from Cubism into a more figurative or representational style for nearly thirty years. He exhibited internationally across Europe, but some of his pioneering artistic innovation was forgotten. His work today is primarily held by French and Hungarian institutions, as well as museums, galleries and private collections both in France and abroad.[3]

Biography

Early life

 
Joseph Csaky, 1911–12, Groupe de femmes, plaster lost, photo Galerie René Reichard, Frankfurt. Exhibited at the 1912 Salon d'Automne, and Salon des Indépendants, 1913, Paris

József Csáky was born in Szeged, Hungary, then part of the dual monarchy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. A provincial southern city, Szeged is now the third-largest in the country.

Csaky moved with his family to Budapest at an early age, where he frequented museums and galleries. In 1905, Csaky was accepted at the Academy of Applied Arts (Mintarajziskola) in Budapest,[2] where he studied under the direction of the sculptor Mátrai Lajos, ifj. (1875–1945) for one and a half years. His interest centered around figure drawing, but, dissatisfied with the local traditional art training (which consisted of copying sculptures in plaster and modeling wild flowers out of clay), Csaky and fellow students left the school to study in the workshop of the photographer-painter László Kimnach, in Buda.[1]

In 1907, for six and a half months, he worked in the Zsolnay Factory in Pécs, making ceramic ashtrays and vases. He worked briefly as a metal founder in Budapest, and at one point with a taxidermist. Attracted by its reputation for lights and great artists, Csaky made the decision to move to Paris, France, and did so with only forty francs in his pocket. He traveled mostly by foot, walking fifty or sixty kilometers per day during the summer of 1908. In Paris a 'new world' opened up for him. He made a living by doing odd jobs: working as a peddler, stone cutter, and posing as a model for students at a local art school, making 20 francs a week.[1] He later posed for individual artists in their own studios, making more money and leaving plenty of time free to pursue his own work.[1][4][5] By autumn of 1908 he shared a studio space at Cité Falguière with Joseph Brummer, a Hungarian friend who had opened the Brummer Gallery with his brothers and was studying art. Within three weeks of Csaky's arrival in Paris, Brummer showed the newcomer a sculpture he was working on: an exact copy of an African sculpture from the Congo. Brummer told Csaky that another artist in Paris, a Spaniard named Pablo Picasso, was painting in the spirit of 'Negro' sculptures.

 
Joseph Csaky, 1912, Danseuse (Femme à l'éventail, Femme à la cruche), original plaster, exhibited at the Salon d'Automne of 1912, Paris, n. 405, and Salon des Indépendants of 1914, n. 813, photo from Csaky archives AC.110
 
Joseph Csaky, Head (Tête d'homme), 1913, Plaster lost. Photo published in Montjoie! March 1914,[6][7] also Richard, René, 1988

Shortly after, Csaky found a studio at the artists' collective La Ruche in Montparnasse. The building had been constructed by Gustave Eiffel, and was adapted as artists' studios by the sculptor Alfred Boucher. Among other émigré artists at La Ruche were Alexander Archipenko (who arrived in Paris the same year), Wladimir Baranoff-Rossine, and Sonia Delaunay (Terk). In the early years of the 20th century, other artists who lived there for a time included Guillaume Apollinaire, Ossip Zadkine, Moise Kisling, Marc Chagall, Max Pechstein, Fernand Léger, Jacques Lipchitz, Max Jacob, Blaise Cendrars, Chaïm Soutine, Robert Delaunay, Amedeo Modigliani, Constantin Brâncuși, and Diego Rivera, attracted to Paris from across Europe and Mexico.

With his discovery of the work of Auguste Rodin laying the groundwork for an oeuvre characterized by a mastery of sculptural techniques, Csaky's work in stone carving would evolve.[2]

Csaky's work of this time is already distinguished by a Cubist understanding of volumetric and spatial relationships, with the integration of armature and open space, and the rhythmic use of geometry. Planes are faceted into abstract architectonic forms. His sculptural interpretation of Cubist painting is marked by elements employed in non-Western sculpture (Cycladic art, Oceanic art, the Art of ancient Egypt).[2]

Soon Csaky and his new Parisian girlfriend Jeanne moved into a studio together on rue Didot, near the Pasteur Institute and Montparnasse Cemetery. They married.

"Thinking back on my life now," Csaky would later write, "I am amazed by the speed of the events. A few months before I had been a poor and helpless fellow who had found himself in a strange country all alone, not even speaking the language. And then, all of a sudden, from one minute to the next, I became a man with an orderly life, a place of his own and a wife, an honest, and good working woman." (Joseph Csaky)[1]

This relationship did not last long. The two separated but continued a friendship. Csaky rented a small attic studio on rue Dalou. In 1910, Csaky won the Ferenc József Art Scholarship in Szeged, giving him enough money to attend l'Académie de La Palette, a private school in Paris where the painters Jean Metzinger, André Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Le Fauconnier taught. He was able to devote himself full-time to art.[4]

Cubism

 
Joseph Csaky, Head (Tête d'homme), 1913, plaster lost; Robert Delaunay, Hommage à Blériot, 1914 (Kunstmuseum Basel); Henri Ottmann, The Hat Seller, published in The Sun (New York), 15 March 1914

"Csaky, after Archipenko, was the first sculptor to join the cubists, with whom he exhibited from 1911 on. They were followed by Duchamp-Villon [...] and then in 1914 by Lipchitz, Laurens and Zadkine." (Michel Seuphor)[1][8]

The inspirations that led Csaky to Cubism were diverse,[9] as they were for artists of the Bateau-Lavoir, on the one hand, or the Puteaux Group on the other. While art historians are divided on the influence of African art in the distillation of Cubism, they generally agree that Cézanne's geometric syntax was significant, as well as Seurat's approach to painting. Given a growing dissatisfaction with the classical methods of representation, and the contemporary changes—the industrial revolution, exposure to art from across the world—artists began to transform their expression.[1]

Archipenko and Csaky—along with the Cubist sculptors who would follow—stimulated by the profound cultural changes and their own experiences, contributed their own personal artistic language.

Csaky wrote of the direction his art had taken during the crucial years:

"There was no question which was my way. True, I was not alone, but in the company of several artists who came from Eastern Europe. I joined the cubists in the Académie La Palette, which became the sanctuary of the new direction in art. On my part I did not want to imitate anyone or anything. This is why I joined the cubists movement." (Joseph Csaky)[1]

 
Joseph Csaky, Deux figures, 1920, relief, limestone, polychrome, 80 cm, Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, the Netherlands
 
Joseph Csaky, 1914, Tête (Cubist portrait), bronze, 38.5 cm, collection MTA Foundation

Early in his artistic career, Csaky had understood that Cubism was a great liberating force. It was a means of reassessing the nature of sculpture as a four-dimensional continuum, with space, mass, plane and direction, dynamic and changing in time. It represented for him the departure from classicism, from the conventions of his predecessors.

Csaky first met Picasso at the gallery of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. He had already met Guillaume Apollinaire but was never as close to either of them as to Archipenko, Henri Laurens, Jacques Villon, Raymond Duchamp-Villon, and Jean Metzinger. They often met at Henri Le Fauconnier's studio on rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs, near the boulevard du Montparnasse, as well as with the Montjoie ! publisher Ricciotto Canudo, Café de la Rotonde and La Closerie des Lilas in Montparnasse.

Csaky exhibited his highly stylized 1909 sculpture, Tête de femme (Portrait de Jeanne), at the 1910 Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts. The following year, he exhibited a proto-Cubist work entitled Mademoiselle Douell (1910).[10]

In 1911, Csaky exhibited his Cubist sculptures at the Salon des Indépendants (21 April – 13 June) with Archipenko, Duchamp, Gleizes, Laurencin, La Fresnaye, Léger, Picabia and Metzinger. This exhibition provoked an 'involuntary scandal' out of which Cubism, brought to the attention of the general public for the first time, emerged and spread throughout Paris and beyond. Four months later Csaky exhibited at the Salon d'Automne (1 October – 8 November) together with the same artists, in addition to Modigliani, Lhote, Duchamp-Villon, Villon and František Kupka.

The following year Csaky showed with the Cubists at the 1912 Salon des Indépendants (20 March – 16 May): with Archipenko, Gleizes, La Fresnaye, Laurencin, Le Fauconnier, Léger, Lhote, Zadkine, Duchamp, Constantin Brâncuși, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Robert Delaunay, Juan Gris, Piet Mondrian, Alfréd Réth, and Diego Rivera.

 
The Salon d'Automne of 1912, held in Paris at the Grand Palais from 1 October to 8 November. Csaky's sculpture Groupe de femmes (Groupe de trois femmes, Groupe de trois personnages) of 1911–12 is exhibited to the left, in front of two sculptures by Amedeo Modigliani. Other works are shown by Jean Metzinger, František Kupka, Francis Picabia and Henri Le Fauconnier.

Csaky participated in the Salon d'Automne of 1912 (1 October – 8 November) with the Cubists: Duchamp, Duchamp-Villon, Gleizes, La Fresnaye, Le Fauconnier, Léger, Lhote, Marcoussis, Metzinger, Picabia, Villon and Kupka. A rare photograph of the 1912 Salon d'Automne shows Csaky's Groupe de femmes, a sculpture now lost, exhibited in front of Kupka's Amorpha: Fugue in Two Colours and next to sculptures by Amedeo Modigliani.[11] In the same photograph can be seen Henri Le Fauconnier's vast composition Les Montagnards attaqués par des ours (Mountaineers Attacked by Bears,) now at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum; and Francis Picabia's monumental La Source (The Spring), now at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

 
Montjoie! Ricciotto Canudo, André Salmon, Head (Tête d'homme) by Joseph Csaky reproduced, 3rd issue, 18 March 1914

Csaky exhibited as a member of Section d'Or at the Galerie La Boétie (10–30 October 1912), with Archipenko, Duchamp-Villon, La Fresnaye, Gleizes, Gris, Laurencin, Léger, Lhote, Marcoussis, Metzinger, Picabia, Kupka, Villon and Duchamp.

By this time, Csaky's participation in the avant-garde milieu was complete.

1914–1918

 
Joseph Csaky, Exhibition poster, Galerie de l'Effort Moderne, Léonce Rosenberg, 1920

"One could say that before the war, life in Paris had been like a summer day, and after the announcement of war the sky and life were darkened by weighty, heavy clouds" (Joseph Csaky)[1]

Csaky enlisted as a volunteer in the French army and was expecting to be called in. Before joining his company, he married Marguerite Fétrié on 19 August 1914. She had become pregnant and had a child during their relationship, and Csaky wanted to become his daughter's legal father prior to his departure for what became known as World War I.

1918–1928

Returning to Paris after the war, Csaky began a series of works derived in part from the machine aesthetic; streamlined with geometric and mechanical affinities. By this time Csaky's artistic vocabulary had evolved: it was distinctly mature, showing a new, refined sculptural quality. Nothing in early modern sculpture in comparable to the revolutionary work Csaky produced in the years directly succeeding World War I. These were nonrepresentational free-standing objects, i.e., abstract three-dimensional constructions combining organic and geometric elements.

"Csaky derived from nature forms which were in concordance with his passion for architecture, simple, pure, and psychologically convincing." (Maurice Raynal, 1929)[1]

The scholar Edith Balas writes of Csaky's sculpture following the war years:

"Csáky, more than anyone else working in sculpture, took Pierre Reverdy's theoretical writings on art and cubist doctrine to heart. "Cubism is an eminently plastic art; but an art of creation, not of reproduction and interpretation." The artist was to take no more than "elements" from the external world, and intuitively arrive at the "idea" of objects made up of what for him constant in value. Objects were not to be analyzed; neither were the experiences they evoked. They were to be re-created in the mind, and thereby purified. By some unexplained miracle the "pure" forms of the mind, an entirely autonomous vocabulary, of (usual geometric) forms, would make contact with the external world." (Balas, 1998, p. 27)[1]

 
Joseph Csaky, ca 1920, Tête (front and side view), limestone, 60 cm, Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, the Netherlands
 
Joseph Csaky, 1920, Tête (Head), marble, 28 cm, photograph by Léonce Rosenberg, Kröller-Müller Museum. Reproduced in Cahiers Individualistes de Philosophie et d'art, Volume 1, Number 6, December 1920.[12]

These 1919 works (e.g., Cones and Spheres, Abstract Sculpture) are made of juxtaposing sequences of rhythmic geometric forms, where light and shadow, mass and the void, play a key role. They allude, occasionally, to the structure of the human body or modern machines, but the semblance functions only as "elements" (Reverdy) and are deprived of descriptive narrative. Csaky's polychrome reliefs of the early 1920s display an affinity with Purism—an extreme form of the Cubism aesthetic developing at the time—in their rigorous economy of architectonic symbols and the use of crystalline geometric structures.[1]

With this intense flurry of activity, Csaky was taken on by Léonce Rosenberg, owner of the Galerie de l'Effort Moderne, 19, rue de la Baume, Paris. By 1920 Rosenberg was the sponsor, dealer and publisher of Piet Mondrian, Léger, Lipchitz and Csaky. He had just published Le Néo-Plasticisme—a collection of writings by Mondrian—and Theo van Doesburg's Classique-Baroque-Moderne. Csaky's showed a series of works at Rosenberg's gallery in December 1920.

For the following three years, Rosenberg purchased Csaky's entire artistic production. In 1921 Rosenberg organized an exhibit entitled Les maîtres du Cubisme, a group show that featured works by Csaky, Albert Gleizes, Metzinger, Mondrian, Gris, Léger, Picasso, Laurens, Georges Braque, Auguste Herbin, Gino Severini, Georges Valmier, Amédée Ozenfant and Léopold Survage.

Csaky's works of the early 1920s reflect a collective spirit of the time,[13]

"a puritanical denial of sensuousness that reduced the cubist vocabulary to rectangles, verticals, horizontals," writes Balas, "a Spartan alliance of discipline and strength" to which Csaky adhered in his Tower Figures. "In their aesthetic order, lucidity, classical precision, emotional neutrality, and remoteness from visible reality, they should be considered stylistically and historically as belonging to the De Stijl movement." (Balas, 1998)[1]

Joseph Csaky became a naturalized French citizen in 1922. He began to work with Marcel Coard, a dealer and gallery owner who from 1924 onward bought Csaky's sculptures in order to cast them in bronze. The two created furniture in the Art Deco style, within which sculpted elements of marble, wood and glass were integrated.[1]

 
Jacques Doucet's hôtel particulier, 33 rue Saint-James, Neuilly-sur-Seine, 1929. Joseph Csaky designed Doucet's staircase, Henri Laurens the fountain, Jacques Lipchitz the fireplace mantel, and Louis Marcoussis a Cubist rug. The sculptor Gustave Miklos and others collaborated in the decoration of the studio

In 1927 Csaky collaborated with other artists, including Miklos, Jacques Lipchitz and Marcoussis, on the decoration of Studio House, rue Saint-James, Neuilly, owned by the French fashion designer Jacques Doucet. Doucet was also collecting Post-Impressionist and Cubist paintings; he bought Les Demoiselles d'Avignon directly from Picasso's studio. Csaky designed the staircase in Studio House.[14]

1928–1971, Toward figurativism

From 1928, while his fellow pioneers tended towards greater abstraction, Csaky moved away both from the faceted Cubism of his early Parisian epoch, and from the highly abstract or nonrepresentational intent of his post-war series. Turning towards figurative art, he no longer saw potential in abstraction.

Waldemar George, the Polish-French art critic, writes in 1930 of Csaky's departure from abstraction: "The cube, the polyhedron with right angles with its abrupt edges, are replaced by ovoids and spheres."[15] Turning towards a more representational figuration—in a highly stylized, curvilinear and descriptive form—allowed Csaky the contact with reality, a reality that ran deeper than surface appearances. For the rest of his life, he was interested primarily in the female body in youth, a theme that expressed optimism, happiness and well-being. He was fascinated by the beauty and expressiveness of the human form in itself. He explored the subject to express his ideas and connotations attached to them. His monumental figures (although not always in sheer size) possess a timeless "amaranthine beauty, a fundamental essence relevant only to themselves."[1]

Csaky continued exhibiting from the 1930s onwards; he was shown internationally, with shows in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Brussels, Hungary, and Luxembourg. In 1935, he traveled in Greece, an experience that shaped his artistic exploration of nudes for the remainder of his life. He had an exhibit there in 1965.

Csaky died in Paris on 1 May 1971.

Legacy

Joseph Csaky contributed substantially to the development of modern sculpture, both as a pioneer in applying Cubism to sculpture, and as a leading figure in nonrepresentational art of the 1920s.

After fighting alongside the French underground movement against the Nazis during World War II, Csaky faced many difficulties: health issues, family problems and a lack of work-related commissions. Unlike many of his friends, whose names became widely known, Csaky was appreciated by fewer people (but they notably included art collectors, art historians and museum curators).

"Today, however," writes Edith Balas, "in a postmodernist atmosphere, those aspects of his art that made Csáky unacceptable to the more advanced modernists are readily accepted as valid and interesting. The time has come to give Csáky his rightful place in the ranks of the avant-garde, based on an analysis of his artistic innovations and accomplishments."[1]

Art market

On 30 October 2017, a rock crystal and obsidian sculpture by Csaky, titled Tête (Head), was purchased at an auction at Sotheby's Paris for $1,077,004 (925,500 EUR), a world record for the artist. The 1923 work, formerly in the collection of fashion designer Jacques Doucet, had not appeared on the market since it was commissioned from the artist by Doucet.[16][17]

Selected works

 
Joseph Csaky, La Danseuse (The Dancer or Táncoslány in Hungarian), 1940–1959, Public Square (Kálvin tér, Anna-Kút), Szeged, Hungary
  • Femme et enfant (1909), collection Zborovsky
  • Tête de femme de profil (1909), exhibited Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, 1910, Paris
  • Tête de femme de face (1909)
  • Tête de femme, Portrait de Jeanne (1910)
  • Tête d'homme, Autoportrait, Tête Cubiste (1911), location unknown, exhibited Salon d'Automne, 1911, Paris
  • Groupe de femmes (1911–1912), location unknown, exhibited Salon d'Automne, 1912, Salon des Indépendants, 1913, Paris
  • Head (1912)
  • Tête de femme, Buste de femme (1912), exhibited Salon des Indépendants, 1913, Paris
  • Danseuse, Femme à l'éventail, Femme à la cruche (1912), exhibited Salon d'Automne, 1912, Paris
  • Figure de Femme Debout (Standing Woman), or Figure Habillée (1913), exhibited Salon des Indépendants, 1914, Paris, Musée National d'Art Moderne, and currently in the collection of Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris,[18][19] Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA),[20] and Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York, acquired 1977[21]
  • Works on paper, 1913, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York[22]
  • Head (1913) location unknown
  • Head (1914), Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, Musée d'Art et d'Industrie de Saint-Étienne
  • Cubist Composition (1919) Musée d'Art moderne et d'Art contemporain de la Ville de Liège (MAMAC)
  • Cubist Head (1920)
  • Deux figures (1920), Relief, Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, the Netherlands[23]
  • Tête (1923), Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, the Netherlands
  • Mother and Child (1926)
  • Mother and Young Child, (1930), stone, 160 cm: Les Musées Nationaux, circa 1950. Pétrus Faure (1891–1985), Mayor from 1947 to 1971, had this monumental sculpture placed in the Parc du Bouchet, Le Chambon-Feugerolles (believed to be its current location).[24]
  • La Danseuse, the Dancer (1940–1959), Szeged, Kálvin tér, Anna-kút public square
  • Bas-Reliefs (1952), commissioned by Georges Lecompte, Ministère de l'Education Nationale, Amiens, two Bas-Reliefs by Csaky[25]

Selected exhibitions

 
Joseph Csaky, ca. 1920, Tête (Head), limestone, 60 cm, Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo

During his life

  • Salon de la Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, 1910–1911
  • Salon d'Automne, 1911, 1912, 1945, 1949
  • Salon des Indépendants, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1914, 1920, 1923
  • Salon de la Section d'Or, Galerie La Boétie, Octobre 1912
  • Galerie de l'Effort Moderne, Léonce Rosenberg, Les Mâitre du Cubisme, Paris, 1921, 1924
  • Salon des Artistes Décorateurs, 1924
  • Salon des Tuileries, 1928, 1929
  • Reid & Lefevre Art Gallery, London, 1930
  • Exposition de l'Union des Artistes Modernes, 1930, 1931, 1937, 1955
  • Museum Heilbronn, Museum, Saarbrücken, 1932
  • Galerie Casperi, München, Galerie Valentien, Stuttgart, 1933
  • Ernst Múzeum, Budapest, 1936
  • L'Exposition Internationale, Arts et Techniques dans la Vie moderne, (Expositions universelles de Paris), 1937
  • Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Cent Ans de Sculpture Française, 1933–1939, 1940
  • Volksuniversiteit, Rotterdam, the Netherlands 1949
  • Centraal Museum, Utrecht, the Netherlands, 1950
  • Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, the Netherlands, 1953
  • Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris, Le Cubisme, 1953
  • Musée d'Art et d'Industrie de Saint-Étienne, L'Art de l'Afrique Noire, 1956
  • Csáky Retrospective Exhibition (Kulturális Kapcsolatok Intézete), Budapest, Hungary, 1959
  • Musée d'Art et d'Industrie de Saint-Étienne, Cent sculptures de Daumier à nos jours, 1960
  • Musée d'Ixelles, Palais des beaux-arts, Charleroi, Tournai, Luxembourg, De Maillol à nos Jours: 120 sculptures et dessins du Musée National d'Art Moderne de Paris, 1960
  • Athènes, Biennale en plein air, Panathénées de la Sculpture, Sept.-Nov 1965
  • Deutsche Gesellschaft für bildende Kunst, Berlin, Avant-Garde, 1910–1930 Osteurops, 1967
  • Minneapolis Institute of Arts, Art Deco, July–September 1971
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1971
  • Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1971
  • Museu de Arte Contemporanea de USP, São Paulo, Tendencias de Escultura Moderna, W. Zanini, 1971
  • Tate Gallery, London. Léger and Purist Paris, 18 November 1970 – 24 January 1971

Post-humous

  • Hayward Gallery, London, Pioneers of Modern Sculpture, 20 July – 23 September 1973
  • Galerie Dépôt 15, Paris, Csaky, 15 October-30 November 1973
  • Galerie des Beaux-Arts, Bordeaux, Les Cubistes, 4 May-1 September 1973
  • Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Les Cubistes, 26 September-10 November 1973
  • Palais des Arts et de la Culture, Brest, La Sculpture et le Cubisme, 1976
  • Musée Bourdelle, Trois Sculpteurs des Années 30, Gargalo-Csaky-Lambert Rucki, Juin-Sept. 1977
  • Grand Palais, Paris, L'Art Moderne dans les Musée de Province, 1977
  • Orangerie des Tuileries, Paris, Donation Pierre Lévy, 16 February-16 April 1978
  • Musée Rodin, Paris, Formes Humaines, neuvième biennale de sculpture contemporaine – Hommage a Csaky, 3–30 June 1980
  • Fondation Maeght, Saint-Paul de Vence, Sculpture du XXe siècle 1900–1945: Tradition et rupture, 4 July-4 October 1981
  • Kubismus, Kunsthalle, Cologne, Germany, 1982
  • Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Troyes, Csaky, Sculptures Dessins, 26 Juin-15 September 1986
  • Galerie René Reichard, Frankfurt, Joseph Csaky 1888–1971, Kubistische und Nachkubistische Skulpturen 1913–1950, 12/10 – 3/12 1988
  • Galerie Berès, Au Temps des Cubistes, Oct. 2006 – Jan. 2007
  • Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York collection, acquired 1977, and the Modern Art Gallery in Saarbrücken collection, Figure de Femme Debout, or Figure Habillée (1913)
  • Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris – MAM/ARC, L'école de Paris, 1904–1929 – La part de l'Autre, 2000
  • Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Helenes Favourites, 2004
  • Palazzo dei Diamanti, Ferrara (FE), Il Cubismo. Rivoluzione e tradizione, 2004
  • MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts, Debrecen, Ninety-Nine Years – The Antal-Lusztig Collection in the Modem, 2006
  • Galería Leandro Navarro, Madrid, Los tiempos del Cubismo, 2007
  • MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts, Debrecen, Body language – Antal-Lusztig collection II., 2007
  • Janos Gat Gallery, New York City, Hungarian Modernism, 2010
  • Hollis Taggart Galleries, New York City, Modernist Works from a California Collection, 2010

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Edith Balas, 1998, Joseph Csaky: A Pioneer of Modern Sculpture, Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society
  2. ^ a b c d Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Joseph Csáky, Collection Online 20 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Joseph Csáky works at the Hungarian National Gallery
  4. ^ a b József Csáky, terminartors.com 1 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Szelesi Zoltán, 1969, Móra Ferenc Múzeum Évkönyve, Szeged, Párizsba induló szegedi művészek a század elején
  6. ^ Montjoie! March 1914, Gallica
  7. ^ Montjoie! March 1914, kubisme.info 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Robert Rosenblum, "Cubism", Readings in Art History 2, 1976, Seuphor, Sculpture of this Century, 29
  9. ^ Article written by Joseph Csaky, Le Bulletin de la vie artistique, Bernheim-Jeune, Paris, 15 December 1924, pp. 507-509
  10. ^ Félix Marcilhac, Joseph Csaky, Une Vie – Une Oeuvre, 23 Nov – 21 December 2007, exhibit catalogue, Galerie Félix Marcilhac
  11. ^ Salon d'Automne, 1912 photograph showing Csaky's Groupe de Femmes (1911–1912)
  12. ^ Joseph Csaky, 1920, Tête (Head), Action: Cahiers Individualistes de Philosophie et d’art, Volume 1, Number 6, December 1920
  13. ^ Joseph Csaky, 1920 Figure (Woman), Action: Cahiers Individualistes de Philosophie et d’art, Volume 1, Number 6, December 1920
  14. ^ Csaky's staircase in the home of Jacques Doucet
  15. ^ Csaky, Waldemar George. 1930, Editions Ars, Paris
  16. ^ Carly Olson, Sotheby's Paris Breaks Record for Highest Total of a Various-Owner Design Sale in France, Architectural Digest, 2 November 2017
  17. ^ Sotheby's catalogue lot entry, Joseph Csaky, Unique Tête, 1923, rock crystal and obsidian, 34.1 x 10 x 10 cm
  18. ^ Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
  19. ^ Agence photographique de la Réunion des musées nationaux RMN, Joseph Csaky Femme debout, 1913,
  20. ^ Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Joseph Csaky, Standing Woman, 1913
  21. ^ Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York, Joseph Csaky, Standing Woman, 1913, acquired 1977
  22. ^ Joseph Czáky, Collection Martin Birnbaum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  23. ^ Kröller-Müller Museum, Csaky, Deux figures, 1920, Relief 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ Mother and Young Child, (1930), stone
  25. ^ Amiens, two Bas-Reliefs by Csaky

Further reading

In chronological order:

  • Apollinaire, Guillaume, 1912, Art and Curiosity, the Beginning of Cubism, Le Temps
  • Canudo, Ricciotto, 1914, Montjoie! text by André Salmon, 3rd issue, 18 March
  • Reverdy, Pierre, 1917, Sur le Cubisme, Nord-Sud (Paris), 15, 5–7 March
  • Apollinaire, Guillaume, Chroniques d'art, 1902–1918
  • Pál, Bor, 1924, Az új művészet céljáról. Csáky József szobraihoz, Magyar Iparművészet, 65–68
  • Tabarant, Adolphe, Le Bulletin de la vie artistique, December 1924 and January 1925
  • Pál, Bor, 1926, Csáky József és szobrászata, Budapest (Corvina Kiadó, Budapest, 1972)
  • Basler, Adolphe, 1928, La Sculpture Moderne en France, Paris
  • Raynal, Maurice, 1929, A propos de Csaky, Montparnasse, no. 56
  • George, Waldemar 1930, Csaky, Editions Ars, Paris
  • Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration, 1930, Darmstadt, 247–250
  • Sandor, Kemeri, 1931, Visage de Bourdelle, Paris
  • Csáky József, 1931, Tiszta építészet és szobrászat, Magyar Iparművészet, 129–131
  • Wilenski, Reginald Howard, 1932, The meaning of modern sculpture, AMS Press
  • Laude, Jean, 1933, La Peinture Français et l'Art Negre, Paris
  • Goldwater, R., 1938 (1967) Primitivism in Modern Art, New York
  • Gide, André, 1947, The Journals of André Gide, Vol. 2 1889 – 1913 New York
  • Seuphor, Michel, 1959, "La Sculpture de ce Siècle", Dictionnaire de la Sculpture Moderne, Edition du Griffon, Neuchâtel, Switzerland
  • Dutka Mária, 1959, Csáky József szobrászművész kiállítása, Magyar Nemzet, 1 September
  • Seuphor, Michel, 1960, The Sculpture of This Century, New York
  • Lebel, Robert. Anthologie des Formes Inventées, Paris: Edition de la Galerie du Cercle, 1962
  • Robbins, Daniel, 1963–1964, From Symbolism to Cubism: The Abbaye of Créteil, Art Journal 23
  • Csáky József, 1964, Pályakezdése (Önéletrajzi részlet, I., II., III.,) Tiszatáj
  • Le XXe Siècle, Chefs-D’Oeuvre de L’Art, 1965, Librairie Hachette, Paris, Musée National d’Art Modern, Paris
  • Bowness, Alan, 1965, Modern Sculpture, London
  • Lugano, 1967, Art International Vol. XI no. 3
  • Burnham, Jack, 1968, Beyond Modern Sculpture, New York
  • Bajomi Lázár Endre, 1967, A Montmartre, Budapest, Corvina Kiadó
  • Bölöni György, 1967, Képek között, Budapest, Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó
  • Cooper, Douglas, 1970, The Cubist Epoch, Phaidon Press Limited, London 1970, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art & The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • Green, Christopher, 1971, Léger and l'Esprit Nouveau, 1912–1928 In Tate Gallery Exhibition Catalogue, 18 November 1970 – 24 January 1971, London
  • Green, Christopher, 1971, Léger and the Purists, Paris, London
  • Ferenc, Bodri, 1971, Csáky József, Művészet, 8. szám
  • A.M. Hammacher, 1969, 1971, La Sculpture, L’Evolution de la Sculpture Moderne, Thames and Hudson, London
  • Burnham, Jack, 1971, The structure of Art, New York
  • Szélesi Zoltán, 1972, Csáky József, Budapest
  • Szelesi Zoltán, 1972, Szegedi avantgarde szobrászok, Móra Ferenc Múzeum Évkönyv
  • Csáky József, 1972, Emlékek a modern művészet nagy évtizedéből, 1904–1914 (Memories of the great decade of modern art, 1904–1914), Budapest
  • Karshan, Donald, 1973, Csaky, Paris: Dépôt 15, 1973
  • Elsen, Albert E., 1974, Origins of Modern Sculpture: Pioneers and Premises, New York
  • Passuth Krisztina, 1974, Magyar művészek az európai avantgardeban (A kubizmustól a konstruktivizmusig, 1919–1925), Budapest
  • Marcilhac, Felix, 1974, Josef Csaky: A Pioneer of Modern Sculpture, Connoisseur 186, no. 747
  • Gera György, 1975, A kubizmus, Gondolat Kiadó, Budapest
  • Lévy, Pierre, 1976, Des artistes et un collectionneur, Paris
  • Marcilhac, Felix, 1977, Josef Csaky 1888–1971, Encyclopedie Connaissance des Arts, no. 309
  • Jeanine Warnod, 1978, Les Artistes de Montparnasse, La Ruche, Edition Mayer-Van Wilder
  • Szelesi Zoltán, 1978–79, Csáky József utolsó évtizede, Móra Ferenc Múzeum Évkönyv
  • La Chronique des Arts, March 1980, Supplement a la Gazette des Beaux Arts, no. 1334
  • Balas, Edith, 1981, The Art of Egypt as Modigliani's Stylistic Source, Gazette des Beaux-Arts
  • Reichard, René, 1983, Joseph Csaky, 1888–1971, Einführung in das plastische werk, vol. II. Mémoire de René Reichard, Université Goethe, Frankfurt
  • Purchases by the Hirshhorn Museum 1974–1983, Sculpture Newsletter (Mountainville, NY: Storm King Art Center, Fall 1983)
  • Balas, Edith, 1987, Brâncuși and Romanian Folk Tradition. East European Monograph, no. 224, Boulder Colorado
  • Balas, Edith, 1987, The Unbuilt Architecture of Modern Sculptures, Gazette des Beaux-Arts
  • Fletcher, Valerie J., 1987, Cubist Sculpture, Washington, DC: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, permanent exhibition brochure
  • Ferenc, Apró, 1988, Adatok Csáky József pályakezdéséhez (Párizs, 1908–1914), Tiszatáj
  • Főszerk, Fitz Péter, 1999, Hungarian contemporary art lexicon, Budapest: Encyclopedia
  • Denoël, 1984, Un Siècle d'Art Moderne: l'Histoire du Salon des Indépendants, 1884–1984
  • A. Barré-Despond, 1986, UAM (Union des Artistes Modernes), Paris
  • Karshan, Donald, 1986, Csaky, Exhibition catalogue, Musée d'Art Moderne de Troyes
  • Szuromi Pál, 1988, Egy modern klasszikus szobrász: Csáky József munkásságáról, Tiszatáj
  • Szuromi Pál, Csáky József, Szeged
  • Johnson, Stanley, R., 1991, Cubism and La Section d'Or Exhibition Catalogue, Chicago-Düsseldorf
  • Tóth Attila, Szeged szobrai és muráliái, Szeged
  • Szeged folyóirat 2006. Január, 4. oldal (Csernus Sándor: Szeged és Párizs kézfogása)
  • Souren Melikian, 2006, International Herald Tribune, Discovering the many facets of Cubism, 28–29 October
  • Marcilhac, Félix, 2007, Joseph Csaky, Du cubisme historique à la figuration réaliste, catalogue raisonné des sculptures, Les Editions de l'Amateur, Paris

External links

  • Réunion des Musées Nationaux, Grand Palais, Agence photographique
  • Catalogue of public auction, 1921, two works by Csaky reproduced
  • Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, Josef Csaky, Abstraction (Standing Figure) 1919
  • La Danseuse, Szeged
  • CSÁKY József, in Hungarian
  • CSÁKY József 12 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Csáky József, Szuromi Pál, Csongrád Megyei Lapkiadó 1989
  • Joconde, Portail des Collection des Musée de France, CSAKY Joseph
  • Ministère de la Culture, France, La Médiathèque de l'Architecture et du Patrimoine, Base Memoire
  • Base Arcade, Culture.gouv.fr Csaky
  • Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands, 23 works by Joseph Csaky
  • Hungarian National Gallery – Magyar Nemzeti Gáleria, Budapest
  • Correspondance échangée entre Léonce Rosenberg et Joseph Csaky, contrat et ensemble de pièces documentaires, The Frick Collection, Archives Directory for the History of Collecting in America
  • in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website  

joseph, csaky, also, written, josef, csàky, csáky, józsef, józsef, csáky, joseph, alexandre, czaky, march, 1888, 1971, hungarian, avant, garde, artist, sculptor, graphic, artist, best, known, early, participation, cubist, movement, sculptor, csaky, first, scul. Joseph Csaky also written Josef Csaky Csaky Jozsef Jozsef Csaky and Joseph Alexandre Czaky 18 March 1888 1 May 1971 was a Hungarian avant garde artist sculptor and graphic artist best known for his early participation in the Cubist movement as a sculptor Csaky was one of the first sculptors in Paris to apply the principles of pictorial Cubism to his art A pioneer of modern sculpture 1 Csaky is among the most important sculptors of the early 20th century 2 He was an active member of the Section d Or group between 1911 and 1914 and closely associated with Crystal Cubism Purism De Stijl Abstract art and Art Deco throughout the 1920s and 1930s Joseph CsakyJoseph Csaky in 1926BornCsaky Jozsef 1888 03 18 18 March 1888Szeged Austria HungaryDied1 May 1971 1971 05 01 aged 83 Paris FranceNationalityHungarian FrenchKnown forSculptureNotable workGroupe de femmes 1911 1912 Danseuse 1912 Head 1912 Figure de Femme Debout or Figure Habillee 1913 Head Tete d homme 1913 Head 1914 Cones and Spheres 1919 Mother and Child 1926 MovementCubism Purism De Stijl Abstract art Art DecoCsaky fought alongside French soldiers during World War I and in 1922 became a naturalized French citizen He was a founding member of l Union des Artistes modernes UAM in 1929 During World War II Csaky joined forces with the French underground movement la Resistance in Valencay In the late 1920s he collaborated with some other artists in designing furniture and other decorative pieces including elements of the Studio House of the fashion designer Jacques Doucet After 1928 Csaky moved away from Cubism into a more figurative or representational style for nearly thirty years He exhibited internationally across Europe but some of his pioneering artistic innovation was forgotten His work today is primarily held by French and Hungarian institutions as well as museums galleries and private collections both in France and abroad 3 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Cubism 1 3 1914 1918 1 4 1918 1928 1 5 1928 1971 Toward figurativism 2 Legacy 2 1 Art market 3 Selected works 4 Selected exhibitions 4 1 During his life 4 2 Post humous 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Joseph Csaky 1911 12 Groupe de femmes plaster lost photo Galerie Rene Reichard Frankfurt Exhibited at the 1912 Salon d Automne and Salon des Independants 1913 Paris Jozsef Csaky was born in Szeged Hungary then part of the dual monarchy of the Austro Hungarian Empire A provincial southern city Szeged is now the third largest in the country Csaky moved with his family to Budapest at an early age where he frequented museums and galleries In 1905 Csaky was accepted at the Academy of Applied Arts Mintarajziskola in Budapest 2 where he studied under the direction of the sculptor Matrai Lajos ifj 1875 1945 for one and a half years His interest centered around figure drawing but dissatisfied with the local traditional art training which consisted of copying sculptures in plaster and modeling wild flowers out of clay Csaky and fellow students left the school to study in the workshop of the photographer painter Laszlo Kimnach in Buda 1 In 1907 for six and a half months he worked in the Zsolnay Factory in Pecs making ceramic ashtrays and vases He worked briefly as a metal founder in Budapest and at one point with a taxidermist Attracted by its reputation for lights and great artists Csaky made the decision to move to Paris France and did so with only forty francs in his pocket He traveled mostly by foot walking fifty or sixty kilometers per day during the summer of 1908 In Paris a new world opened up for him He made a living by doing odd jobs working as a peddler stone cutter and posing as a model for students at a local art school making 20 francs a week 1 He later posed for individual artists in their own studios making more money and leaving plenty of time free to pursue his own work 1 4 5 By autumn of 1908 he shared a studio space at Cite Falguiere with Joseph Brummer a Hungarian friend who had opened the Brummer Gallery with his brothers and was studying art Within three weeks of Csaky s arrival in Paris Brummer showed the newcomer a sculpture he was working on an exact copy of an African sculpture from the Congo Brummer told Csaky that another artist in Paris a Spaniard named Pablo Picasso was painting in the spirit of Negro sculptures Joseph Csaky 1912 Danseuse Femme a l eventail Femme a la cruche original plaster exhibited at the Salon d Automne of 1912 Paris n 405 and Salon des Independants of 1914 n 813 photo from Csaky archives AC 110 Joseph Csaky Head Tete d homme 1913 Plaster lost Photo published in Montjoie March 1914 6 7 also Richard Rene 1988 Shortly after Csaky found a studio at the artists collective La Ruche in Montparnasse The building had been constructed by Gustave Eiffel and was adapted as artists studios by the sculptor Alfred Boucher Among other emigre artists at La Ruche were Alexander Archipenko who arrived in Paris the same year Wladimir Baranoff Rossine and Sonia Delaunay Terk In the early years of the 20th century other artists who lived there for a time included Guillaume Apollinaire Ossip Zadkine Moise Kisling Marc Chagall Max Pechstein Fernand Leger Jacques Lipchitz Max Jacob Blaise Cendrars Chaim Soutine Robert Delaunay Amedeo Modigliani Constantin Brancuși and Diego Rivera attracted to Paris from across Europe and Mexico With his discovery of the work of Auguste Rodin laying the groundwork for an oeuvre characterized by a mastery of sculptural techniques Csaky s work in stone carving would evolve 2 Csaky s work of this time is already distinguished by a Cubist understanding of volumetric and spatial relationships with the integration of armature and open space and the rhythmic use of geometry Planes are faceted into abstract architectonic forms His sculptural interpretation of Cubist painting is marked by elements employed in non Western sculpture Cycladic art Oceanic art the Art of ancient Egypt 2 Soon Csaky and his new Parisian girlfriend Jeanne moved into a studio together on rue Didot near the Pasteur Institute and Montparnasse Cemetery They married Thinking back on my life now Csaky would later write I am amazed by the speed of the events A few months before I had been a poor and helpless fellow who had found himself in a strange country all alone not even speaking the language And then all of a sudden from one minute to the next I became a man with an orderly life a place of his own and a wife an honest and good working woman Joseph Csaky 1 This relationship did not last long The two separated but continued a friendship Csaky rented a small attic studio on rue Dalou In 1910 Csaky won the Ferenc Jozsef Art Scholarship in Szeged giving him enough money to attend l Academie de La Palette a private school in Paris where the painters Jean Metzinger Andre Dunoyer de Segonzac and Henri Le Fauconnier taught He was able to devote himself full time to art 4 Cubism Edit Joseph Csaky Head Tete d homme 1913 plaster lost Robert Delaunay Hommage a Bleriot 1914 Kunstmuseum Basel Henri Ottmann The Hat Seller published in The Sun New York 15 March 1914 Csaky after Archipenko was the first sculptor to join the cubists with whom he exhibited from 1911 on They were followed by Duchamp Villon and then in 1914 by Lipchitz Laurens and Zadkine Michel Seuphor 1 8 The inspirations that led Csaky to Cubism were diverse 9 as they were for artists of the Bateau Lavoir on the one hand or the Puteaux Group on the other While art historians are divided on the influence of African art in the distillation of Cubism they generally agree that Cezanne s geometric syntax was significant as well as Seurat s approach to painting Given a growing dissatisfaction with the classical methods of representation and the contemporary changes the industrial revolution exposure to art from across the world artists began to transform their expression 1 Archipenko and Csaky along with the Cubist sculptors who would follow stimulated by the profound cultural changes and their own experiences contributed their own personal artistic language Csaky wrote of the direction his art had taken during the crucial years There was no question which was my way True I was not alone but in the company of several artists who came from Eastern Europe I joined the cubists in the Academie La Palette which became the sanctuary of the new direction in art On my part I did not want to imitate anyone or anything This is why I joined the cubists movement Joseph Csaky 1 Joseph Csaky Deux figures 1920 relief limestone polychrome 80 cm Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo the Netherlands Joseph Csaky 1914 Tete Cubist portrait bronze 38 5 cm collection MTA Foundation Early in his artistic career Csaky had understood that Cubism was a great liberating force It was a means of reassessing the nature of sculpture as a four dimensional continuum with space mass plane and direction dynamic and changing in time It represented for him the departure from classicism from the conventions of his predecessors Csaky first met Picasso at the gallery of Daniel Henry Kahnweiler He had already met Guillaume Apollinaire but was never as close to either of them as to Archipenko Henri Laurens Jacques Villon Raymond Duchamp Villon and Jean Metzinger They often met at Henri Le Fauconnier s studio on rue Notre Dame des Champs near the boulevard du Montparnasse as well as with the Montjoie publisher Ricciotto Canudo Cafe de la Rotonde and La Closerie des Lilas in Montparnasse Csaky exhibited his highly stylized 1909 sculpture Tete de femme Portrait de Jeanne at the 1910 Salon de la Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts The following year he exhibited a proto Cubist work entitled Mademoiselle Douell 1910 10 In 1911 Csaky exhibited his Cubist sculptures at the Salon des Independants 21 April 13 June with Archipenko Duchamp Gleizes Laurencin La Fresnaye Leger Picabia and Metzinger This exhibition provoked an involuntary scandal out of which Cubism brought to the attention of the general public for the first time emerged and spread throughout Paris and beyond Four months later Csaky exhibited at the Salon d Automne 1 October 8 November together with the same artists in addition to Modigliani Lhote Duchamp Villon Villon and Frantisek Kupka The following year Csaky showed with the Cubists at the 1912 Salon des Independants 20 March 16 May with Archipenko Gleizes La Fresnaye Laurencin Le Fauconnier Leger Lhote Zadkine Duchamp Constantin Brancuși Wilhelm Lehmbruck Robert Delaunay Juan Gris Piet Mondrian Alfred Reth and Diego Rivera The Salon d Automne of 1912 held in Paris at the Grand Palais from 1 October to 8 November Csaky s sculpture Groupe de femmes Groupe de trois femmes Groupe de trois personnages of 1911 12 is exhibited to the left in front of two sculptures by Amedeo Modigliani Other works are shown by Jean Metzinger Frantisek Kupka Francis Picabia and Henri Le Fauconnier Csaky participated in the Salon d Automne of 1912 1 October 8 November with the Cubists Duchamp Duchamp Villon Gleizes La Fresnaye Le Fauconnier Leger Lhote Marcoussis Metzinger Picabia Villon and Kupka A rare photograph of the 1912 Salon d Automne shows Csaky s Groupe de femmes a sculpture now lost exhibited in front of Kupka s Amorpha Fugue in Two Colours and next to sculptures by Amedeo Modigliani 11 In the same photograph can be seen Henri Le Fauconnier s vast composition Les Montagnards attaques par des ours Mountaineers Attacked by Bears now at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum and Francis Picabia s monumental La Source The Spring now at the Museum of Modern Art in New York Montjoie Ricciotto Canudo Andre Salmon Head Tete d homme by Joseph Csaky reproduced 3rd issue 18 March 1914 Csaky exhibited as a member of Section d Or at the Galerie La Boetie 10 30 October 1912 with Archipenko Duchamp Villon La Fresnaye Gleizes Gris Laurencin Leger Lhote Marcoussis Metzinger Picabia Kupka Villon and Duchamp By this time Csaky s participation in the avant garde milieu was complete 1914 1918 Edit Joseph Csaky Exhibition poster Galerie de l Effort Moderne Leonce Rosenberg 1920 One could say that before the war life in Paris had been like a summer day and after the announcement of war the sky and life were darkened by weighty heavy clouds Joseph Csaky 1 Csaky enlisted as a volunteer in the French army and was expecting to be called in Before joining his company he married Marguerite Fetrie on 19 August 1914 She had become pregnant and had a child during their relationship and Csaky wanted to become his daughter s legal father prior to his departure for what became known as World War I 1918 1928 Edit Returning to Paris after the war Csaky began a series of works derived in part from the machine aesthetic streamlined with geometric and mechanical affinities By this time Csaky s artistic vocabulary had evolved it was distinctly mature showing a new refined sculptural quality Nothing in early modern sculpture in comparable to the revolutionary work Csaky produced in the years directly succeeding World War I These were nonrepresentational free standing objects i e abstract three dimensional constructions combining organic and geometric elements Csaky derived from nature forms which were in concordance with his passion for architecture simple pure and psychologically convincing Maurice Raynal 1929 1 The scholar Edith Balas writes of Csaky s sculpture following the war years Csaky more than anyone else working in sculpture took Pierre Reverdy s theoretical writings on art and cubist doctrine to heart Cubism is an eminently plastic art but an art of creation not of reproduction and interpretation The artist was to take no more than elements from the external world and intuitively arrive at the idea of objects made up of what for him constant in value Objects were not to be analyzed neither were the experiences they evoked They were to be re created in the mind and thereby purified By some unexplained miracle the pure forms of the mind an entirely autonomous vocabulary of usual geometric forms would make contact with the external world Balas 1998 p 27 1 Joseph Csaky ca 1920 Tete front and side view limestone 60 cm Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo the Netherlands Joseph Csaky 1920 Tete Head marble 28 cm photograph by Leonce Rosenberg Kroller Muller Museum Reproduced in Cahiers Individualistes de Philosophie et d art Volume 1 Number 6 December 1920 12 These 1919 works e g Cones and Spheres Abstract Sculpture are made of juxtaposing sequences of rhythmic geometric forms where light and shadow mass and the void play a key role They allude occasionally to the structure of the human body or modern machines but the semblance functions only as elements Reverdy and are deprived of descriptive narrative Csaky s polychrome reliefs of the early 1920s display an affinity with Purism an extreme form of the Cubism aesthetic developing at the time in their rigorous economy of architectonic symbols and the use of crystalline geometric structures 1 With this intense flurry of activity Csaky was taken on by Leonce Rosenberg owner of the Galerie de l Effort Moderne 19 rue de la Baume Paris By 1920 Rosenberg was the sponsor dealer and publisher of Piet Mondrian Leger Lipchitz and Csaky He had just published Le Neo Plasticisme a collection of writings by Mondrian and Theo van Doesburg s Classique Baroque Moderne Csaky s showed a series of works at Rosenberg s gallery in December 1920 For the following three years Rosenberg purchased Csaky s entire artistic production In 1921 Rosenberg organized an exhibit entitled Les maitres du Cubisme a group show that featured works by Csaky Albert Gleizes Metzinger Mondrian Gris Leger Picasso Laurens Georges Braque Auguste Herbin Gino Severini Georges Valmier Amedee Ozenfant and Leopold Survage Csaky s works of the early 1920s reflect a collective spirit of the time 13 a puritanical denial of sensuousness that reduced the cubist vocabulary to rectangles verticals horizontals writes Balas a Spartan alliance of discipline and strength to which Csaky adhered in his Tower Figures In their aesthetic order lucidity classical precision emotional neutrality and remoteness from visible reality they should be considered stylistically and historically as belonging to the De Stijl movement Balas 1998 1 Joseph Csaky became a naturalized French citizen in 1922 He began to work with Marcel Coard a dealer and gallery owner who from 1924 onward bought Csaky s sculptures in order to cast them in bronze The two created furniture in the Art Deco style within which sculpted elements of marble wood and glass were integrated 1 Jacques Doucet s hotel particulier 33 rue Saint James Neuilly sur Seine 1929 Joseph Csaky designed Doucet s staircase Henri Laurens the fountain Jacques Lipchitz the fireplace mantel and Louis Marcoussis a Cubist rug The sculptor Gustave Miklos and others collaborated in the decoration of the studio In 1927 Csaky collaborated with other artists including Miklos Jacques Lipchitz and Marcoussis on the decoration of Studio House rue Saint James Neuilly owned by the French fashion designer Jacques Doucet Doucet was also collecting Post Impressionist and Cubist paintings he bought Les Demoiselles d Avignon directly from Picasso s studio Csaky designed the staircase in Studio House 14 1928 1971 Toward figurativism Edit From 1928 while his fellow pioneers tended towards greater abstraction Csaky moved away both from the faceted Cubism of his early Parisian epoch and from the highly abstract or nonrepresentational intent of his post war series Turning towards figurative art he no longer saw potential in abstraction Waldemar George the Polish French art critic writes in 1930 of Csaky s departure from abstraction The cube the polyhedron with right angles with its abrupt edges are replaced by ovoids and spheres 15 Turning towards a more representational figuration in a highly stylized curvilinear and descriptive form allowed Csaky the contact with reality a reality that ran deeper than surface appearances For the rest of his life he was interested primarily in the female body in youth a theme that expressed optimism happiness and well being He was fascinated by the beauty and expressiveness of the human form in itself He explored the subject to express his ideas and connotations attached to them His monumental figures although not always in sheer size possess a timeless amaranthine beauty a fundamental essence relevant only to themselves 1 Csaky continued exhibiting from the 1930s onwards he was shown internationally with shows in France Germany the Netherlands Brussels Hungary and Luxembourg In 1935 he traveled in Greece an experience that shaped his artistic exploration of nudes for the remainder of his life He had an exhibit there in 1965 Csaky died in Paris on 1 May 1971 Legacy EditJoseph Csaky contributed substantially to the development of modern sculpture both as a pioneer in applying Cubism to sculpture and as a leading figure in nonrepresentational art of the 1920s After fighting alongside the French underground movement against the Nazis during World War II Csaky faced many difficulties health issues family problems and a lack of work related commissions Unlike many of his friends whose names became widely known Csaky was appreciated by fewer people but they notably included art collectors art historians and museum curators Today however writes Edith Balas in a postmodernist atmosphere those aspects of his art that made Csaky unacceptable to the more advanced modernists are readily accepted as valid and interesting The time has come to give Csaky his rightful place in the ranks of the avant garde based on an analysis of his artistic innovations and accomplishments 1 Art market Edit On 30 October 2017 a rock crystal and obsidian sculpture by Csaky titled Tete Head was purchased at an auction at Sotheby s Paris for 1 077 004 925 500 EUR a world record for the artist The 1923 work formerly in the collection of fashion designer Jacques Doucet had not appeared on the market since it was commissioned from the artist by Doucet 16 17 Selected works Edit Joseph Csaky La Danseuse The Dancer or Tancoslany in Hungarian 1940 1959 Public Square Kalvin ter Anna Kut Szeged Hungary Femme et enfant 1909 collection Zborovsky Tete de femme de profil 1909 exhibited Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts 1910 Paris Tete de femme de face 1909 Tete de femme Portrait de Jeanne 1910 Tete d homme Autoportrait Tete Cubiste 1911 location unknown exhibited Salon d Automne 1911 Paris Groupe de femmes 1911 1912 location unknown exhibited Salon d Automne 1912 Salon des Independants 1913 Paris Head 1912 Tete de femme Buste de femme 1912 exhibited Salon des Independants 1913 Paris Danseuse Femme a l eventail Femme a la cruche 1912 exhibited Salon d Automne 1912 Paris Figure de Femme Debout Standing Woman or Figure Habillee 1913 exhibited Salon des Independants 1914 Paris Musee National d Art Moderne and currently in the collection of Centre Georges Pompidou Paris 18 19 Los Angeles County Museum of Art LACMA 20 and Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York acquired 1977 21 Works on paper 1913 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 22 Head 1913 location unknown Head 1914 Musee National d Art Moderne Centre Georges Pompidou Paris Musee d Art et d Industrie de Saint Etienne Cubist Composition 1919 Musee d Art moderne et d Art contemporain de la Ville de Liege MAMAC Cubist Head 1920 Deux figures 1920 Relief Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo the Netherlands 23 Tete 1923 Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo the Netherlands Mother and Child 1926 Mother and Young Child 1930 stone 160 cm Les Musees Nationaux circa 1950 Petrus Faure 1891 1985 Mayor from 1947 to 1971 had this monumental sculpture placed in the Parc du Bouchet Le Chambon Feugerolles believed to be its current location 24 La Danseuse the Dancer 1940 1959 Szeged Kalvin ter Anna kut public square Bas Reliefs 1952 commissioned by Georges Lecompte Ministere de l Education Nationale Amiens two Bas Reliefs by Csaky 25 Joseph Csaky 1920 Deux figures relief sandstone polychrome 80 cm Kroller Muller Museum Joseph Csaky 1920 Face Figure limestone 70 cm Joseph Csaky 1920 Tete Tete cubiste stone 30 cm Joseph Csaky 1920 Figure Woman stone approx 80 cm Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes Joseph Csaky 1921 Figure Tete stone polychrome 36 cm Joseph Csaky 1921 Figure marble white gray yellow 64 cm Joseph Csaky 1921 Figure stone polychrome 65 x 20 x 6 cm Joseph Csaky 1921 Tete Tete de jeune fille Tete d enfant marble white 21 5 cm Musee National d Art Moderne Paris Joseph Csaky 1921 Tete Tete de jeune fille Tete d enfant marble white 21 5 cm profile Musee National d Art Moderne Paris Joseph Csaky 1922 Femme accroupie bronze 50 cm stone base Kroller Muller Museum Joseph Csaky 1922 Figure abstraite stone polychrome 80 cm Joseph Csaky 1922 Tete Head marble white gray veins 55 cmSelected exhibitions Edit Joseph Csaky ca 1920 Tete Head limestone 60 cm Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo During his life Edit Salon de la Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts 1910 1911 Salon d Automne 1911 1912 1945 1949 Salon des Independants 1911 1912 1913 1914 1920 1923 Salon de la Section d Or Galerie La Boetie Octobre 1912 Galerie de l Effort Moderne Leonce Rosenberg Les Maitre du Cubisme Paris 1921 1924 Salon des Artistes Decorateurs 1924 Salon des Tuileries 1928 1929 Reid amp Lefevre Art Gallery London 1930 Exposition de l Union des Artistes Modernes 1930 1931 1937 1955 Museum Heilbronn Museum Saarbrucken 1932 Galerie Casperi Munchen Galerie Valentien Stuttgart 1933 Ernst Muzeum Budapest 1936 L Exposition Internationale Arts et Techniques dans la Vie moderne Expositions universelles de Paris 1937 Palais des Beaux Arts Brussels Cent Ans de Sculpture Francaise 1933 1939 1940 Volksuniversiteit Rotterdam the Netherlands 1949 Centraal Museum Utrecht the Netherlands 1950 Gemeentemuseum Den Haag the Netherlands 1953 Musee National d Art Moderne Paris Le Cubisme 1953 Musee d Art et d Industrie de Saint Etienne L Art de l Afrique Noire 1956 Csaky Retrospective Exhibition Kulturalis Kapcsolatok Intezete Budapest Hungary 1959 Musee d Art et d Industrie de Saint Etienne Cent sculptures de Daumier a nos jours 1960 Musee d Ixelles Palais des beaux arts Charleroi Tournai Luxembourg De Maillol a nos Jours 120 sculptures et dessins du Musee National d Art Moderne de Paris 1960 Athenes Biennale en plein air Panathenees de la Sculpture Sept Nov 1965 Deutsche Gesellschaft fur bildende Kunst Berlin Avant Garde 1910 1930 Osteurops 1967 Minneapolis Institute of Arts Art Deco July September 1971 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 1971 Los Angeles County Museum of Art 1971 Museu de Arte Contemporanea de USP Sao Paulo Tendencias de Escultura Moderna W Zanini 1971 Tate Gallery London Leger and Purist Paris 18 November 1970 24 January 1971Post humous Edit Hayward Gallery London Pioneers of Modern Sculpture 20 July 23 September 1973 Galerie Depot 15 Paris Csaky 15 October 30 November 1973 Galerie des Beaux Arts Bordeaux Les Cubistes 4 May 1 September 1973 Musee d Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris Les Cubistes 26 September 10 November 1973 Palais des Arts et de la Culture Brest La Sculpture et le Cubisme 1976 Musee Bourdelle Trois Sculpteurs des Annees 30 Gargalo Csaky Lambert Rucki Juin Sept 1977 Grand Palais Paris L Art Moderne dans les Musee de Province 1977 Orangerie des Tuileries Paris Donation Pierre Levy 16 February 16 April 1978 Musee Rodin Paris Formes Humaines neuvieme biennale de sculpture contemporaine Hommage a Csaky 3 30 June 1980 Fondation Maeght Saint Paul de Vence Sculpture du XXe siecle 1900 1945 Tradition et rupture 4 July 4 October 1981 Kubismus Kunsthalle Cologne Germany 1982 Musee d Art Moderne de la Ville de Troyes Csaky Sculptures Dessins 26 Juin 15 September 1986 Galerie Rene Reichard Frankfurt Joseph Csaky 1888 1971 Kubistische und Nachkubistische Skulpturen 1913 1950 12 10 3 12 1988 Galerie Beres Au Temps des Cubistes Oct 2006 Jan 2007 Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York collection acquired 1977 and the Modern Art Gallery in Saarbrucken collection Figure de Femme Debout or Figure Habillee 1913 Musee d Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris MAM ARC L ecole de Paris 1904 1929 La part de l Autre 2000 Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo Helenes Favourites 2004 Palazzo dei Diamanti Ferrara FE Il Cubismo Rivoluzione e tradizione 2004 MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts Debrecen Ninety Nine Years The Antal Lusztig Collection in the Modem 2006 Galeria Leandro Navarro Madrid Los tiempos del Cubismo 2007 MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts Debrecen Body language Antal Lusztig collection II 2007 Janos Gat Gallery New York City Hungarian Modernism 2010 Hollis Taggart Galleries New York City Modernist Works from a California Collection 2010See also EditCrystal Cubism Multidimensional artReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Edith Balas 1998 Joseph Csaky A Pioneer of Modern Sculpture Philadelphia American Philosophical Society a b c d Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York Joseph Csaky Collection Online Archived 20 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Joseph Csaky works at the Hungarian National Gallery a b Jozsef Csaky terminartors com Archived 1 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine Szelesi Zoltan 1969 Mora Ferenc Muzeum Evkonyve Szeged Parizsba indulo szegedi muveszek a szazad elejen Montjoie March 1914 Gallica Montjoie March 1914 kubisme info Archived 2 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Robert Rosenblum Cubism Readings in Art History 2 1976 Seuphor Sculpture of this Century 29 Article written by Joseph Csaky Le Bulletin de la vie artistique Bernheim Jeune Paris 15 December 1924 pp 507 509 Felix Marcilhac Joseph Csaky Une Vie Une Oeuvre 23 Nov 21 December 2007 exhibit catalogue Galerie Felix Marcilhac Salon d Automne 1912 photograph showing Csaky s Groupe de Femmes 1911 1912 Joseph Csaky 1920 Tete Head Action Cahiers Individualistes de Philosophie et d art Volume 1 Number 6 December 1920 Joseph Csaky 1920 Figure Woman Action Cahiers Individualistes de Philosophie et d art Volume 1 Number 6 December 1920 Csaky s staircase in the home of Jacques Doucet Csaky Waldemar George 1930 Editions Ars Paris Carly Olson Sotheby s Paris Breaks Record for Highest Total of a Various Owner Design Sale in France Architectural Digest 2 November 2017 Sotheby s catalogue lot entry Joseph Csaky Unique Tete 1923 rock crystal and obsidian 34 1 x 10 x 10 cm Centre Georges Pompidou Paris Agence photographique de la Reunion des musees nationaux RMN Joseph Csaky Femme debout 1913 Los Angeles County Museum of Art LACMA Joseph Csaky Standing Woman 1913 Solomon Guggenheim Museum New York Joseph Csaky Standing Woman 1913 acquired 1977 Joseph Czaky Collection Martin Birnbaum The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Kroller Muller Museum Csaky Deux figures 1920 Relief Archived 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Mother and Young Child 1930 stone Amiens two Bas Reliefs by CsakyFurther reading EditIn chronological order Apollinaire Guillaume 1912 Art and Curiosity the Beginning of Cubism Le Temps Canudo Ricciotto 1914 Montjoie text by Andre Salmon 3rd issue 18 March Reverdy Pierre 1917 Sur le Cubisme Nord Sud Paris 15 5 7 March Apollinaire Guillaume Chroniques d art 1902 1918 Pal Bor 1924 Az uj muveszet celjarol Csaky Jozsef szobraihoz Magyar Iparmuveszet 65 68 Tabarant Adolphe Le Bulletin de la vie artistique December 1924 and January 1925 Pal Bor 1926 Csaky Jozsef es szobraszata Budapest Corvina Kiado Budapest 1972 Basler Adolphe 1928 La Sculpture Moderne en France Paris Raynal Maurice 1929 A propos de Csaky Montparnasse no 56 George Waldemar 1930 Csaky Editions Ars Paris Deutsche Kunst und Dekoration 1930 Darmstadt 247 250 Sandor Kemeri 1931 Visage de Bourdelle Paris Csaky Jozsef 1931 Tiszta epiteszet es szobraszat Magyar Iparmuveszet 129 131 Wilenski Reginald Howard 1932 The meaning of modern sculpture AMS Press Laude Jean 1933 La Peinture Francais et l Art Negre Paris Goldwater R 1938 1967 Primitivism in Modern Art New York Gide Andre 1947 The Journals of Andre Gide Vol 2 1889 1913 New York Seuphor Michel 1959 La Sculpture de ce Siecle Dictionnaire de la Sculpture Moderne Edition du Griffon Neuchatel Switzerland Dutka Maria 1959 Csaky Jozsef szobraszmuvesz kiallitasa Magyar Nemzet 1 September Seuphor Michel 1960 The Sculpture of This Century New York Lebel Robert Anthologie des Formes Inventees Paris Edition de la Galerie du Cercle 1962 Robbins Daniel 1963 1964 From Symbolism to Cubism The Abbaye of Creteil Art Journal 23 Csaky Jozsef 1964 Palyakezdese Oneletrajzi reszlet I II III Tiszataj Le XXe Siecle Chefs D Oeuvre de L Art 1965 Librairie Hachette Paris Musee National d Art Modern Paris Bowness Alan 1965 Modern Sculpture London Lugano 1967 Art International Vol XI no 3 Burnham Jack 1968 Beyond Modern Sculpture New York Bajomi Lazar Endre 1967 A Montmartre Budapest Corvina Kiado Boloni Gyorgy 1967 Kepek kozott Budapest Szepirodalmi Konyvkiado Cooper Douglas 1970 The Cubist Epoch Phaidon Press Limited London 1970 The Los Angeles County Museum of Art amp The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Green Christopher 1971 Leger and l Esprit Nouveau 1912 1928 In Tate Gallery Exhibition Catalogue 18 November 1970 24 January 1971 London Green Christopher 1971 Leger and the Purists Paris London Ferenc Bodri 1971 Csaky Jozsef Muveszet 8 szam A M Hammacher 1969 1971 La Sculpture L Evolution de la Sculpture Moderne Thames and Hudson London Burnham Jack 1971 The structure of Art New York Szelesi Zoltan 1972 Csaky Jozsef Budapest Szelesi Zoltan 1972 Szegedi avantgarde szobraszok Mora Ferenc Muzeum Evkonyv Csaky Jozsef 1972 Emlekek a modern muveszet nagy evtizedebol 1904 1914 Memories of the great decade of modern art 1904 1914 Budapest Karshan Donald 1973 Csaky Paris Depot 15 1973 Elsen Albert E 1974 Origins of Modern Sculpture Pioneers and Premises New York Passuth Krisztina 1974 Magyar muveszek az europai avantgardeban A kubizmustol a konstruktivizmusig 1919 1925 Budapest Marcilhac Felix 1974 Josef Csaky A Pioneer of Modern Sculpture Connoisseur 186 no 747 Gera Gyorgy 1975 A kubizmus Gondolat Kiado Budapest Levy Pierre 1976 Des artistes et un collectionneur Paris Marcilhac Felix 1977 Josef Csaky 1888 1971 Encyclopedie Connaissance des Arts no 309 Jeanine Warnod 1978 Les Artistes de Montparnasse La Ruche Edition Mayer Van Wilder Szelesi Zoltan 1978 79 Csaky Jozsef utolso evtizede Mora Ferenc Muzeum Evkonyv La Chronique des Arts March 1980 Supplement a la Gazette des Beaux Arts no 1334 Balas Edith 1981 The Art of Egypt as Modigliani s Stylistic Source Gazette des Beaux Arts Reichard Rene 1983 Joseph Csaky 1888 1971 Einfuhrung in das plastische werk vol II Memoire de Rene Reichard Universite Goethe Frankfurt Purchases by the Hirshhorn Museum 1974 1983 Sculpture Newsletter Mountainville NY Storm King Art Center Fall 1983 Balas Edith 1987 Brancuși and Romanian Folk Tradition East European Monograph no 224 Boulder Colorado Balas Edith 1987 The Unbuilt Architecture of Modern Sculptures Gazette des Beaux Arts Fletcher Valerie J 1987 Cubist Sculpture Washington DC Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden permanent exhibition brochure Ferenc Apro 1988 Adatok Csaky Jozsef palyakezdesehez Parizs 1908 1914 Tiszataj Foszerk Fitz Peter 1999 Hungarian contemporary art lexicon Budapest Encyclopedia Denoel 1984 Un Siecle d Art Moderne l Histoire du Salon des Independants 1884 1984 A Barre Despond 1986 UAM Union des Artistes Modernes Paris Karshan Donald 1986 Csaky Exhibition catalogue Musee d Art Moderne de Troyes Szuromi Pal 1988 Egy modern klasszikus szobrasz Csaky Jozsef munkassagarol Tiszataj Szuromi Pal Csaky Jozsef Szeged Johnson Stanley R 1991 Cubism and La Section d Or Exhibition Catalogue Chicago Dusseldorf Toth Attila Szeged szobrai es muraliai Szeged Szeged folyoirat 2006 Januar 4 oldal Csernus Sandor Szeged es Parizs kezfogasa Souren Melikian 2006 International Herald Tribune Discovering the many facets of Cubism 28 29 October Marcilhac Felix 2007 Joseph Csaky Du cubisme historique a la figuration realiste catalogue raisonne des sculptures Les Editions de l Amateur ParisExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph Csaky Reunion des Musees Nationaux Grand Palais Agence photographique Ricciotto Canudo 1914 Montjoie text by Andre Salmon 3rd issue 18 March Catalogue of public auction 1921 two works by Csaky reproduced Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington DC Josef Csaky Abstraction Standing Figure 1919 La Danseuse Szeged CSAKY Jozsef in Hungarian CSAKY Jozsef Archived 12 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine Csaky Jozsef Szuromi Pal Csongrad Megyei Lapkiado 1989 Joconde Portail des Collection des Musee de France CSAKY Joseph Ministere de la Culture France La Mediatheque de l Architecture et du Patrimoine Base Memoire Base Arcade Culture gouv fr Csaky Kroller Muller Museum Otterlo Netherlands 23 works by Joseph Csaky Hungarian National Gallery Magyar Nemzeti Galeria Budapest Correspondance echangee entre Leonce Rosenberg et Joseph Csaky contrat et ensemble de pieces documentaires The Frick Collection Archives Directory for the History of Collecting in America Joseph Csaky in American public collections on the French Sculpture Census website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Csaky amp oldid 1151984765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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