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Med Dunajem in Ljubljano : dejavnost podružnice Avstrijskega umetnostnega društva na Kranjskem med letoma 1852 in 1877
ID Valant, Miha (Author)

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Abstract
Članek obravnava dejavnost ljubljanske podružnice Avstrijskega umetnostnega društva (Österreichischer Kunstverein) na Kranjskem med letoma 1852 in 1877 ter jo umešča v širši kontekst umetnostnih društev v habsburški monarhiji. Avstrijsko umetnostno društvo, ustanovljeno na Dunaju leta 1850, je bilo eno osrednjih orodij meščanskega kulturnega udejstvovanja v 19. stoletju, saj je prek mreže regionalnih podružnic (v Gradcu, Brnu, Celovcu, Ljubljani idr.) omogočilo kroženje umetnin po vsej monarhiji. Ljubljanska podružnica, ustanovljena leta 1852, je pomenila prvi poskus sistematičnega institucionalnega oblikovanja javnega umetnostnega življenja na Kranjskem. Z razstavami, umetnostnimi loterijami in članstvom, ki je povezovalo umetnike, uradnike, industrialce in plemstvo, je omogočila neposreden stik meščan­skega občinstva z umetnostjo. Raziskava temelji predvsem na analizi sočasnega nemškojezičnega časopisja (La­ibacher Zeitung, Laibacher Tagblatt) in dopolnilno na arhivskih virih, pri čemer raz­kriva dve fazi delovanja podružnice: prvo, kratkotrajno obdobje med letoma 1852 in 1854 ter drugo, intenzivnejše med letoma 1863 in 1877. V tem času je društvo v Lju­bljani pripravilo vrsto razstav, na katerih so prevladovala dela dunajskih in nemških umetnikov, zlasti krajinarjev in žanrskih slikarjev, kar je ustrezalo okusu premožnega meščanstva. Udeležba domačih umetnikov je bila skromna; med njimi izstopa slikar Anton Karinger, ključna osebnost ljubljanske podružnice ter povezovalni člen med Ljubljano in Dunajem. Podružnica je imela pomembno vlogo tudi pri razvoju umetnostne kritike in pisanja o umetnosti v Ljubljani, saj so razstave spremljala obširna časopisna poročila, ki so me­ščanskemu občinstvu približevala mednarodno likovno umetnost. Društvo je s tem pri­spevalo k oblikovanju umetnostne javnosti ter širjenju estetskega in kulturnega obzorja lokalne družbe. Vendar pa so k njegovemu postopnemu zatonu po letu 1870 z različno intenziteto verjetno prispevali različni dejavniki: smrt Antona Karingerja, šibka institu­cionalna podpora, omejeno število aktivnih umetnikov, majhno zanimanje meščanstva za nakup umetnin in gospodarska kriza po letu 1873. Zadnje razstave podružnice so bile posvečene t. i. senzacijskim slikam, ki so sledile evropskim modnim tokovom in obenem nakazovale spremembo v razumevanju umetnosti kot javnega spektakla. Čeprav je bila življenjska doba ljubljanske podružnice razmeroma kratka, je nje­no delovanje pomenilo pomemben prelom v umetnostnem življenju na Kranjskem. Vpeljalo je nove oblike razstavljanja in meščanskega razvedrila ter oblikovalo zametek trga umetnin in poročanja o umetnosti. Prispevek tako osvetljuje doslej spregledano poglavje kulturne zgodovine Ljubljane ter ga umešča v širši srednjeevropski okvir raz­merja med umetnostnim središčem in periferijo v 19. stoletju.

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:Avstrijsko umetnostno društvo, 19. stoletje, Ljubljana, umetnostni trg, Kranjska, umetnostna društva, umetnostne razstave, meščanska kultura, Anton Karinger
Work type:Article
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:FF - Faculty of Arts
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Year:2025
Number of pages:Str. 261-291
Numbering:Letn. 19, št. 2
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-178703 This link opens in a new window
UDC:75.036(436.1):929Karinger A.
ISSN on article:2350-4218
DOI:10.4312/ars.19.2.261-291 This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:263962627 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:04.03.2026
Views:102
Downloads:42
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Record is a part of a proceedings

Title:Med Kranjsko in Dunajem
COBISS.SI-ID:263951875 This link opens in a new window

Record is a part of a journal

Title:Ars & humanitas : revija za umetnost in humanistiko = journal of arts and humanities
Publisher:Založba Univerze v Ljubljani
ISSN:2350-4218
COBISS.SI-ID:269590528 This link opens in a new window

Licences

License:CC BY-SA 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Description:This Creative Commons license is very similar to the regular Attribution license, but requires the release of all derivative works under this same license.

Secondary language

Language:English
Title:Between Vienna and Ljubljana : the activities of the branch of the Austrian Art Society in Carniola
Abstract:
The article examines the activities of the Ljubljana branch of the Austrian Art Society (Österreichischer Kunstverein) in Carniola between 1852 and 1877, situating it within the broader context of art societies in the Habsburg Monarchy. Founded in Vienna in 1850, the Austrian Art Society was one of the key instruments of bourgeois cul­tural engagement in the nineteenth century. Through its network of regional branches (in Graz, Brno, Klagenfurt, Ljubljana, and elsewhere), it facilitated the circulation of artworks throughout the Monarchy. Established in 1852, the Ljubljana branch repre­sented the first systematic attempt to organize public artistic life in Carniola. Through exhibitions, art lotteries, and a socially diverse membership that included artists, of­ficials, industrialists, and members of the nobility, the branch brought art closer to the urban middle class. The research is based primarily on an analysis of contemporary German-language newspapers (Laibacher Zeitung, Laibacher Tagblatt), complemented by archival sourc­es, and reveals two distinct phases in the branch’s activity: an initial, short-lived period between 1852 and 1854, and a second, more intensive phase between 1863 and 1877. During these years, the Society organized annual exhibitions in Ljubljana, dominated by works by Viennese and German artists—especially landscapes and genre scenes— which reflected the aesthetic preferences of the bourgeois audience. The participation of local artists was modest; among them, the painter Anton Karinger stood out as the leading figure of the Ljubljana branch and an important link between Ljubljana and Vienna. The Ljubljana branch also played a crucial role in the development of art criticism and art journalism in the region, as its exhibitions were accompanied by extensive press coverage that familiarized the local public with international art. In doing so, the Society contributed to the formation of an informed art audience and to the ex­pansion of the city’s cultural and aesthetic horizons. Nevertheless, several factors, of varying intensity, led to the branch’s decline after 1870: the death of Anton Karinger, weak institutional support, the limited number of active artists, low interest among the bourgeois public in purchasing artworks, and the economic crisis following the 1873 stock market crash. The final exhibitions in the 1870s, devoted to Sensationsbilder (sensational paintings), reflected both European exhibition fashions and a shift toward understanding art as a form of public spectacle. Although short-lived, the Ljubljana branch of the Austrian Art Society repre­sented a significant turning point in the artistic life of nineteenth-century Carniola. It introduced new forms of exhibition and bourgeois entertainment, helped shape an early art market as well as art reporting. The article thus sheds light on a previously overlooked chapter of Ljubljana’s cultural history and places it within the broader Cen­tral European framework of relations between artistic centers and peripheries in the nineteenth century.

Keywords:Austrian Art Society, 19th century, Ljubljana, art market, Carniola, art societies, art exhibitions, bourgeois culture, Anton Karinger

Projects

Funder:ARIS - Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency
Project number:P6-0199
Name:Slovenska umetnost in umetnost Srednje Evrope in Jadrana

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