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At the end of World War II, Anna Chromy's family moved from Bohemia to Vienna, Austria. Her family did not have enough money for her to attend art school however, so only after she married and moved to Paris was it possible. She received her education at the École des Beaux-Arts. It was here she realised an interest in Salvador Dalí and other surrealists, and began using the soft colours of William Turner in her paintings. A life-threatening accident in 1992 meant that Anna Chromy she was unable to paint for eight years. She turned her attention to sculpture using bronze and marble as her medium.[3]
Anna Chromy has studios in Pietrasanta, Tuscany where she also has her bronze foundries, Fonderia Artistica Mariani and Massimo Del Chiaro. For her marble sculptures she works at the studio of Massimo Galleni in Pietrasanta. In Carrara, she sculpts at Studio Michelangelo of Franko Barattini. Conscience art * The 15ft High Cloak of Conscience Cloak of Conscience weighs 45 tonnes Visitors can walk inside. The Cloak of Conscience close up Chromy's best-known piece is the empty coat, known as The Cloak of Conscience, Piétà or Commendatore, located in Cathedral in Salzburg, Austria, Stavovske divadlo in Prague, National Archeological Museum in Athens and elsewhere. Currently, Chromy is transforming The Cloak into a chapel over four metres high, carved out of a block of white marble weighing 200 tons in the Cave Michelangelo in Carrara. Other important works include the Olympic Spirit, to be placed in front of the new library in Shanghai; and Europe, a contemporary reinterpretation of the old myth, to be placed at the European institutions.[4] In 2009 her “Olivier d’Or” was presented by Albert II, Prince of Monaco to Nobel Peace Prize winner, Elie Wiesel. In 2008 she presented a model of The Cloak of Conscience to Pope Benedict XVI at Saint Peters in Rome to mark the creation of the Conscience Institute.[5] Chromy draws inspiration from music, opera in particular; classic dance; and the ancient myths. Her paintings contain references to the Vienna School of Fantastic Realism and other Central European artists. Her colours, sometimes used also on sculptures, have a subtle Turner-like touch.[6] Exhibitions * Don Giovanni and the Sound of Bronze (2000) in Prague References 1. ^ "Anna Chromy Biography". Sculpture and Paintings. Surrealist lover. 2010-12-13. http://www.artnet.com/Galleries/About.asp?G=&gid=425933129&which=&rta=http://www.artnet.com. Retrieved 2008-07-12. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/ ", Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License |
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