Konstantinos Volanakis

Konstantinos Volanakis (1902)

Konstantinos Volanakis (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Βολανάκης; 1837, Heraklion - 29 June 1907, Piraeus) was a Greek painter who became known as the "father of Greek seascape painting".

Biography

His parents had come from a small village near Rethymno. Later, they moved again for business reasons, and he completed his basic education on Syros in 1856.[1] Afterward, urged on by his brothers, he went to Trieste and became an accountant for a family of Greek merchants who were related to his family by marriage.[1] While there, he made sketches of ships and harbors in his account books. Rather than dismiss him, the family recognized his artistic talent, and made arrangements for him to study at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, under Karl von Piloty, joining a group of Greek students that included Nikolaos Gyzis, Georgios Jakobides, Nikiphoros Lytras and Polychronis Lembesis.[1] His instructors discouraged any sort of landscape painting, because it was "in decline", so he concentrated on portraits.

The Battle of Lissa (1869)

His break came in 1869, three years after the Battle of Lissa, when Emperor Franz Joseph held a drawing competition to memorialize the event. Volanakis won the contest, receiving 1000 gold Florins and free travel cruises with the Austrian navy for three years.[2] He took full advantage of this, producing numerous canvases and sketches. He married in 1874. Nine years later, despite warnings from Gyzis that it would ruin his career, he returned to Greece and settled in Piraeus, where his family had a pottery factory, citing pressure from his wife, whose health was suffering from the cold winters in Germany.[1]

From then until 1903, he was a teacher at the Athens School of Fine Arts, where one of his best-known students was Michalis Oikonomou. He also operated his own private school.[2] Another of his pupils was Sophia Laskaridou[3] In 1889, he was awarded the Silver Cross of the Order of the Redeemer.[2] He was, however, very poor in his later years, due to his very large family and declining interest in his art. In an effort to increase his income, he reversed the usual method of painting first, then framing, by working with a group of framers who would make luxurious carved frames first, then creating paintings to fit them.

He died from complications related to a major hernia. His funeral was on an important election day, so very few people attended.[1] Most of his works are in private collections.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Konstantinos Volanakis: The Father of Greek Seascape painting @ Astypalaia/Wordpress.
  2. 1 2 3 Brief biography @ the National Gallery (Athens) website.
  3. Λασκαρίδου Σοφία (in Greek), National Gallery of Greece, retrieved 2016-02-21
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