Andras Marko - Artist Info

About Andras Marko

Name variants

Andrea Marko, Andreas Marko
  • Biography from the Archives of askART

    Andras Marko biographical photo
    András or Andrea Markó (1824–1895) was an Austrian-Italian painter, mainly of landscapes. Like his brother, the more famous landscape painter Károly Markó the Younger (Carlos Marko), he was active in Florence, Italy.

    He was born in Vienna. Like his brother Károly (and a third brother, Enrico Markó, 1855–1921) he was initially apprenticed with his father, Károly Markó the Elder. Andrea is said to have also studied with Carl Rahl at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts.

    Andrea was prolific, painting landscapes in oil of diverse parts of Europe, though mostly Italy and Russia. His paintings often have earthy coloration and depict expanses of landscape with minuscule figures or animals.

    The works of Andrea, his brother Carlo, and Serafino De Tivoli depicting the rural landscapes around Siena, in a Macchiaioli style, gave impetus to the Scuola di Staggia, that also loosely included painters such as Emilio Donnini, Carlo Ademollo, Lorenzo Gelati, Francesco Saverio Altamura, and Alessandro La Volpe.

    Among his works: I cavallari maremmani, awarded a prize at the Exhibition of Florence del 1860; Veduta delle Cave di Carrara, awarded a medal at the International Exposition of Vienna in 1873; Paese alpestre; Una vallata; Una carovana di Samoyedi; Boscaglia; Una nevicata in Russia; Le rovine di Taormina; Paesaggi italiani.

    Many of these were sold in the Americas. he was named professor of the Academies of Florence, Urbino, Milan e of the Società degli acquarellisti di Brussels.

    He died in 1895 in Palaia.

    Source:
    "Andras Marko," Wikipedia, Sep. 2016
  • Biography from Dorotheum, Vienna

    Andreas Marko was a Austrian landscape and figure painter and founding member of the avant-garde Staggia School. The leaders of this movement were Florence-based artists Andreas Marko, Lorenzo Gelati (1824-1895), Serafino De Tivoli and Carlo Ademollo (1824-1911).

    They abandoned the Academy's formalism to draw inspiration directly from nature, making rural scenes the subject of their paintings. They were influenced by the Barbizon School in France. They painted the Tuscan countryside from Siena to Florence, from the Serchio Valley to the Apuan Alps.
  • Biography from Wannenes Art Auctions

    Andrea Marko was one of the artists who participated in the School of Staggia, an artistic movement in which the birth of a new sensibility can be fully grasped where the landscape is no longer the naturalistic ideal codified by academic laws enriched by sublime romantic effects but is the translation of the artist's emotion in front of nature photographed realistically and evoked with unprecedented freedom. This group of artists had gathered around Carlo Markò junior and his brother Andrea, sons of Carlo Markò senior who opened a landscape school in his Florentine atelier in the 1940s.

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