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1860 - 1948. Known for: Portrait, still life, allegorical painting.
Maximilian Lenz started to attend the University of Applied Arts in Vienna aged just 14, and was accepted into Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts three years later. After completing his studies, he... Read full biography
Maximilian Lenz started to attend the University of Applied Arts in Vienna aged just 14, and was accepted into Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts three years later. After completing his studies, he received a scholarship to travel to Rome for two years. At the start of the 1890s, he traveled to Buenos... Read full biography
Maximilian Lenz started to attend the University of Applied Arts in Vienna aged just 14, and was accepted into Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts three years later. After completing his studies, he received a scholarship to travel to Rome for two years. At the start of the 1890s, he traveled to Buenos Aires to work on a professional project along with the copper engraver Ferdinand Schirnböck (1859-1930). After returning to Vienna, he became a member of Vienna’s Künstlerhaus in 1896, and was one of... Read full biography
Maximilian Lenz started to attend the University of Applied Arts in Vienna aged just 14, and was accepted into Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts three years later. After completing his studies, he received a scholarship to travel to Rome for two years. At the start of the 1890s, he traveled to Buenos Aires to work on a professional project along with the copper engraver Ferdinand Schirnböck (1859-1930). After returning to Vienna, he became a member of Vienna’s Künstlerhaus in 1896, and was one of the founding members of the Vienna Secession from 1897 onward, remaining involved until 1939. In 1903, he journeyed to Italy with Gustav Klimt, where he visited Ravenna. There, he studied the gold-heavy Byzantine mosaics of San Vitale, which had a... Read full biography
Maximilian Lenz started to attend the University of Applied Arts in Vienna aged just 14, and was accepted into Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts three years later. After completing his studies, he received a scholarship to travel to Rome for two years. At the start of the 1890s, he traveled to Buenos Aires to work on a professional project along with the copper engraver Ferdinand Schirnböck (1859-1930). After returning to Vienna, he became a member of Vienna’s Künstlerhaus in 1896, and was one of the founding members of the Vienna Secession from 1897 onward, remaining involved until 1939. In 1903, he journeyed to Italy with Gustav Klimt, where he visited Ravenna. There, he studied the gold-heavy Byzantine mosaics of San Vitale, which had a short-term (if not longer) impact on his art. After this journey, Lenz moved to Lower Au... Read full biography
