Rudolf PETRIK
1922–1991, Austria

Also known as: P

Name Rudolf PETRIK
Birth 1922, Austria
Died 1991

Rudolf Petrik biography

Rudolf Petrik was born in 1922 in Vienna where he studied at the academy of arts under Robin Christian Andersen and Josef Dubrowsky. The influence of his teachers can be detected in this early body of work, in which he painted in a naturalistic manner. As off 1952 his work shifted to a more geometric use of form, mostly rendered in oil or gouache. In 1953, Petrik became a member of the renowned Vienna Secession. In the following years he took part in numerous group exhibitions alongside some of the most famous Austrian artists of the time such as Wolfgang Hollegha, Fritz Wotruba, Arnulf Rainer, Josef Mikl, Maria Lassnig and Markus Prachensky. He was one of the artists that shaped the avant-garde art movement in Austria. They wanted to free their work from all representation and put their work in context with current international art movements that were coming in. A platform for these artists to meet and mingle was Monsignore Otto Mauer’s gallery “Nächst St. Stephan” in Vienna’s Grünangergasse.

As off the mid-1960s Petrik was occupied with finding a way to visually transform writings into his picture planes. He incorporated quotes, as well as notes from his diaries into his art works and called these ‘Schriftbilder’ (‘Writing Pictures’). He created this body of work as means to counteract the loss of literature.

Next to his profession as an artist, Petrik was also known for his writings as an author. He was involved with the contemporary literary scene surrounding Ernst Jandl, Friederike Mayröcker and Ilse Aichinger. The art historian Otto Breicha described Petrik’s work in a couple of text passages and paid his respect to the entire body of work. Today his work can be found in the Austrian Gallery Belvedere in Vienna, in the Neue Gallery in Linz, as well as numerous private collections, as for example the Collection Leopold.

Source: http://auctionata.com/