PAINTINGS
FROM UNDER HIGH TATRA MOUNTAINS
An art
exhibit during Vychodna folk festival
UNKNOWN
PAINTINGS BY ENGLISH PAINTERS
By: Jan
Botik
During our study stay in
the USA we came across a travel book called "Hungary" published
in London, 1909, and written by English painters Adrian and Marianna
Stokes. We were impressed by the 75 color full-page illustrations almost
half of which were pictures of Slovakia of High Tatra region. The
landscapes and portraits of the Tatra villages of Vazec, Mengusovce and Zdiar with their familiar countryside, folk architecture and costumes
addressed us intimately. As the illustrations are unknown in Slovakia, we
decided to make photographs of them and bring them home for those
interested in seeing them too.
Adrian and Marianne
Stokes arrived in Slovakia in 1905. The High Tatras were their destination
where they stayed about half a year. When they got to know the
extraordinary beauty of the mountains they also visited neighboring towns
and villages. They were most attracted to three villages: Vazec, Mengusovce
and Zdiar-in which they spent majority of their time.
During their stay in High
Tatras, Adrian and Marianne Stokes painted 32 pictures. Four show the
countryside of the Tatras, sixteen were painted in Vazec, five in Mengusovce
and seven in Zdiar. Twenty pictures were painted by Marianne and twelve
by Adrian Stokes.
All paintings by Adrian
Stokes are landscapes. Strbske Pleso, the Mount Krivan, and the
monumental beauty of the central mountain range and some forest
seclusion's enchanted him. This group also includes the landscapes of
hay-harvesting. Most impressive and precious are the paintings showing the
wooden cottages of Vazec, Mengusovce and Zdiar with their picturesque
type of settlements. These pictures have become valuable documents of
various objects of folk architecture that either didn't survive the great
Vazec fire in 1931 or had to give way to modern building materials and
architectural designs.
In all her pictures, with
the exception of two, Marianne Stokes favored portrait paintings. Thus
there are about twenty faces talking to us from her pictures. The painter
chose them as typical representatives of Vazec, Mengusovce and Zdiar
folks. Together with their portraits she also recorded both their everyday
and Sunday clothes. With exceptional documentary precision she emphasized
a variety of the details of their garments and their decorative shaping.
In this way the pictures by Marianne Stokes became valuable icono-graphic
documents of the traditional clothes of the region of the High Tatras in
the period almost a century ago. What Adrian and Marianne Stokes painted
during their stay in the high Tatras manifests their concerted interest in
the so-called "folk genre," i.e. in common people with their
village environment and its traditional culture. Both artists portrayed
the exceptional character of the country and the unique cultural
adjustment of the inhabitants to it. At the turn of the 20th
century this kind of attitude was seen as a progressive ideological
program, the aim of which was to strengthen the national-revival
tendencies in European arts. The Munich academy was the center that
radiated these tendencies to many European countries. Marianne stokes also
received her training there and her interest in figurative and portrait
painting might have been shaped there as well. It is certainly not by
accident that many of our national-Revival painters such as Jozef Hanula,
Miroslav Augusta, Pavel Sochan, Milan Mitrovsky and Peter Kern
studied in Munich.
Adrian and Marianne
stokes not only joined the artistic trend purposefully oriented toward the
rustic environment, but during their visit to Slovakia they chose the
regions which our painters found inspiring too. These are the three
regions in the Tatras in which the Stokes painted and particularly that of
Vazec where they painted most of the pictures. Vazec has become one of
the most famous Slovak villages due to the painters who made it a symbol
of both a traditional village life and of the specific Slovak cultural and
national identity. Adrian and Marianne Stokes can be ranked with such
Slovak artists as Peter Bohun, Pavel Sochan, Jaroslav Kern,
Gustav Maly, Jan
Hala, Martin Benka and
Karol Plicka whose pictures have
become part of the national heritage. As the pictures of Adrian and
Marianne Stokes are unknown in Slovakia, we are taking this opportunity to
familiarize the public with their existence. They are a proof of the
artist’s interest in the High Tatras region and the famous Vazec in
particular. This interest produced not only period pictures of strikingly
charming country and its people, but also pictures synthesizing a strong
social and human message together with a strong social and cultural one.
With regard to the cultural and national values of the works of art by
these so far unknown English painters it is our duty to make them
accessible to our people so that they might assume their place and fulfill
their due role in our cultural heritage.
The High Tatras pictures
by A. and M. Stokes were published in their travel book about Hungary.
Adrian Stokes is the author of the narrative. As the travel book contains
also larger passages describing their six months stay in the High Tatras.
They provide more information on the circumstances and situations of their
stay in the High Tatras and also contribute to better understanding of the
individual characteristics of both of these artists. Their travel
observations, impressions, experiences and memories are interesting to us
because they give a testimony about us. They testify how and with what the
high Tatras, their villages and people impressed them. We can appreciate
especially the information on the people they met, on the village
communities and environments these people lived in, the ethnic groups they
belonged to, the culture and traditions they observed, their behavior,
their perception of foreigners, etc. After a century the Stokes' travel
book remains a valuable resource for making our picture of High Tatras and
its people more complete.
Translated by: Maria Huttova
I have seen the exhibit
twice in Vychodna and must tell you that I was quite impressed and would
like to thank Ph Dr. Jan Botik doc. CSc, for bringing it to Slovakia and
making it available to public
GO
BACK TO FOLK ARTISTS
Published in the Slovak
Heritage Live newsletter Volume 5, No. 3, Fall 1997
Copyright © Vladimir Linder 1997
3804 Yale Street, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5C 1P6
The above article and photographs may not be copied, reproduced,
republished, or redistributed by any means including electronic, without
the express written permission of Vladimir
Linder. All rights reserved.
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