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Górcsövi Alakzatok. Mokry Mészáros Dezső mikroszkopikus látványra építő munkáiról

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Tartalom: http://real.mtak.hu/63829/
Archvum: MTA Knyvtr
Gyjtemny: Status = Published


Type = Article
Cm:
Górcsövi Alakzatok. Mokry Mészáros Dezső mikroszkopikus látványra építő munkáiról
Ltrehoz:
Váraljai, Anna
Kiad:
Akadémiai Kiadó, co-published with Springer Science+Business Media B.V., Formerly Kluwer Academic Publishers B.V.
Dtum:
2013
Tma:
N Visual arts (General) For photography, see TR / vizuális művészet általában
NX4 Art history and criticism / művészettörténet, műkritika
Tartalmi lers:
Abstract
In the 19<sup>th</sup> century, the concept of unconditional objectivity and authenticity was linked up with the techniques of photography and microphotography. As Robert Koch declared, the sight provided by the microscope was more authentic and real than what the eye could see, yet he modified his photos of bacteria by drawing so as to render their spatial features more spectacularly. In addition to the deliberate changes to promote scientific authenticity, another subconscious mechanism, the working of the imagination, must also be considered. The microscopic images also stimulated the fancy of scientific researchers, for the scientific images also had an abstract, fictitious character. As they elicited associations and carried aesthetic qualities, microscopic images soon became popular and widely reproduced souvenirs. They spread first in Switzerland, a few years later in Germany and Austria, providing new sources of inspiration for artists seeking novel ornamental trends around the turn of the century.
Dezső Mokry-Mészáros was the first artist in Hungary and one of the first ones in Europe to paint pictures inspired by microscopic images in 1904. Born at Sajóecseg in 1881, Mokry was a self-taught artist also well versed in the natural sciences. In 1903 he enrolled in the agricultural academy of Magyaróvár where he studied microbiology, botany, the use of the microscope under the guidance of the great scholars of the age. He acquired the difficult skill of microscopic drawing at that time. Apart from the mentioned aesthetic aspects of microscopic images, his pictures inspired by the microcosm were probably also influenced by publications of the microbiological results of his age as well as by vitalist philosophy. His first series, Life on an alien planet reveals that he knew Gusztáv Moesz' writing on the “micro jungle” of the living waters published in 1902 with vivid graphic illustrations. The vitalists traced life from water as its prime source and since the recent findings of microbiology appeared to confirm these ideas, Mokry exposed to the spectator the luxurious jungle of a secret underwater population invisible to the naked eye. The realism of his microscopic motifs is so strict that I managed to identify a lot of his ornaments of zoological and botanic origins (28 tissue sections, microscopic creatures). The working of the imagination is not detectable at the level of motifs but at the level of composition. Mokry juxtaposed fatty tissue and fungi spores, diatom and pollens in his pictures in ways that never occur in nature. He developed a picture structure from arbitrarily elongated formulae to evoke some underwater scenery often extending to the frames he had made himself. Although the actual use of the microscope and of the microscopic images ended around 1910, this motivic stock became fixed and he drew on it for his pictures on prehistory. Dezső Mokry-Mészáros died in Miskolc in 1970. A smaller part of his works — some 180 — are in private collections, the majority being in public museums including the Herman Otto Museum, Miskolc, the Hungarian National Gallery and the Museum of Naïve Art, Kecskemét.
Dezső Mokry-Mészáros was the first artist in Hungary to probe the microscopic world for new motifs, becoming the forerunning and for a long time the only representative of a western trend that popularized microscopic images as aesthetic values. The historical review of the emergence of the microscopic image as an aesthetic object, the identification of the motifs of microscopic origin and the comparison of the motifs with contemporaneous scientific publications have made it clear that Dezső Mokry-Mészáros' works can only be interpreted in full in an international context.
Nyelv:
magyar
Tpus:
Article
PeerReviewed
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Formtum:
text
Azonost:
Váraljai, Anna (2013) Górcsövi Alakzatok. Mokry Mészáros Dezső mikroszkopikus látványra építő munkáiról. Művészettörténeti Értesítő, 62 (1). pp. 83-98. ISSN 0027-5247
Kapcsolat:
https://doi.org/10.1556/MuvErt.62.2013.1.7