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The Grossvenediger

Anton Hansch (1813 - 1876)

The Grossvenediger
Paintings
Oil/canvas
Picture size 76.40 x 105.40 cm
Framesize 97.50 x 127.50 x 10.00 cm
Hansch (signed bottom centre)
414
Currently not in the exhibition
Austria 19th century
© Residenzgalerie Salzburg, Illustration Fotostudio Ulrich Ghezzi, Oberalm

After Archduke Johann’s failed attempt to scale the Grossvenediger in 1828, the first successful ascent took place in 1841.
First ascents and the accessibility of the Alps coincided with the prime of Alpine painting. After 1848, Hansch attracted the interest of the Imperial family. Archduke Franz Carl (1802–1878) became his patron. During extreme mountain tours he undertook, the artist produced around a thousand sketches and drawings. A large collection of them, purchased by Emperor Franz Joseph to support the artist after his financial ruin in the stock market crash of 1873, are now in the Kupferstichkabinett der Akademie der Bildenden Künste, Vienna.
In his depiction of the Grossvenediger, Hansch achieved a magnificently artistic mise en-scène of an Alpine spectacle, far exceeding mere topography. The depth and vastness of the backdrop together with the theatrical light effects enhance the grandeur of the majestic summit, making it a synonym for the nobility of Creation. Tiny figures crouching on the Gernkogel mountain with a view of the Großvenediger, Hohen Fürlegg, Großer Geiger, Schliefer and Dreiherrenspitze mountains illustrate the perspective of the landscape. As opposed to studies of nature painted in a loose, flowing style, this large-scale painting was executed in an academic manner. Influenced by the Swiss Alexandre Calame (1810– 1864), Hansch painted large-scale Alpine landscapes in his latter years.

OEHRING Erika: Hansch Anton, The Grossvenediger, in: DUCKE Astrid, HABERSATTER Thomas, OEHRING Erika: Masterworks. Residenzgalerie Salzburg. Salzburg 2015, p. 148

More artworks by Anton Hansch

By the Königssee

By the Königssee

Anton Hansch

Inv. no. 403