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Aurel Ciupe

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Romanian painter
Aurel Ciupe
BornMay 16, 1900
Lugoj, Kingdom of Romania
DiedJuly 18, 1988
Romania
EducationNational University of Arts Bucharest,
Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma
Alma materAcadémie Julian
Occupation(s)Painter, educator, museum director
MovementFauvism

Aurel Ciupe (May 16, 1900 – July 18, 1988), was a Romanian painter, educator, and museum director. He authored numerous portraits, and landscape paintings, and worked within the Fauvism movement. Ciupe was a professor at the Institute of Fine Arts in Cluj, and served as a director of the Museum of Banat (now National Museum of Banat).

Biography

Aurel Ciupe was born on May 16, 1900, in Lugoj, Kingdom of Romania (now Romania). He attended secondary school in Lugoj, and graduated in 1918.

Ciupe moved to Budapest to study fine art and law after secondary school. However because of the political situation and the Hungarian–Romanian War, he moved to Bucharest to continue his studies at the National University of Arts Bucharest (now Bucharest National University of Arts). In 1919, Ciupe received a scholarship from the governing council to study fine art in Paris, where he attended Académie Julian until 1922. In 1924, he moves to Rome to continue his studies at Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma, under painter Umberto Coromaldi.

After leaving Rome, he briefly moved to Târgu Mureş to join his family. Followed by a move in 1925 to Cluj to join the newly formed "Institute of Fine Arts" in Cluj (now Art and Design University of Cluj-Napoca). He also worked as the Museum of Banat (now National Museum of Banat) in Timișoara. In 1928, Ciupe won the first prize at the Bucharest Art Salon.

In 1933, he moved to Târgu-Mureş to work as a museum director at the public art gallery, and took a teaching position at the public art university.

References

  1. "Mormantul lui Aurel Ciupe". Obiective Turistice (in Romanian). Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  2. ^ Gomboșiu, Ștefan (1936). "Pictorul Aurel Ciupe: Date biografice şi consideraţiuni asupra operei sale". Luceafărul: Revistă culturală, literară şi artistică [Luceafarul: cultural, literary and artistic magazine] (in Romanian). Vol. II. pp. 429–435.
  3. ^ Clement, Russell T. (1994). Les Fauves: A Sourcebook. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 191. ISBN 978-0-313-28333-8.

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