Deutsch
Feigl-Zellner, Margarete Johanna
Felgel von Farnholz, Oskar
Fellin, Benedetto
Fieglhuber-Gutscher, Marianne
Fischer, Johannes
Fleischmann, Trude
Floch, Josef
Frey, Max
Freyer, Pierre
Frieberger-Brunner, Marie Vera
Fried, Theodor
Friedländer, Friedrich
Friedrich, Ernst
Frohner, Adolf
Fränkel, Karl
Fuchs, Ernst
Fuhrken, Fritz
Funke, Helene
Földes, Imre
Gaertner, Eduard
Gassler, Josef
Geiger, Willi
Geiseler, Hermann
Gergely, Tibor
Gerliczy, Emil von
Gerstenbrand, Alfred
Gerster, Otto Helmut
Giessen, Jan Theodorus
Glück, Anselm
Gratama, Lina
Grewenig, Fritz
Grom-Rottmayer, Hermann
Grossmann, Karl
Grossmann, Rudolf
Grosz, George
Grünseis-Frank, Erna
Gröger, Kurt
Gunsam, Karl Josef
Gurschner, Herbert
Gütersloh, Albert Paris
Hacker, Maria
Hafner, Rudolf
Hagel, Alfred
Hammerstiel, Robert
Hanak, Anton
Harsch, Andreas
Harta, Felix Albrecht
Hassmann, Carl Ludwig
Hauk, Karl
Hauptmann, Josef
Hauser, Carry
Hausner, Rudolf
Heidel, Alois
Helnwein, Gottfried
Herbert Bayer, zugeschrieben
Hertlein, Willi
Hess, Bruno
Hessing, Gustav
Heu, Josef
Heuberger, Helmut
Heubner, Friedrich Leonhard
Hilker, Reinhard
Hiller-Foell, Maria
Hlawa, Stephan
Hoffmann, Josef
Hofmann, Egon
Hofmann, Otto
Hohlt, Otto
Hoke, Giselbert
Hollenstein, Stephanie
Hrdlicka, Alfred
Huber, Ernst
Hutter, Wolfgang
Hänisch, Alois
Höllwarth, Ines
Hölzer-Weineck, Irene
Jaeger, Frederick
Jaenisch, Hans
Jaindl, Othmar
Janda, Hermine von
Janesch, Albert
Jansen, Willem
Janssen, Horst
Jaruska, Wilhelm
Jean Cocteau, zugeschrieben
Josef Gassler was born in 1893 in Austerlitz in Moravia (today Czech Republic). He studied in Breslau and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna in the class of Rudolf Bacher, Hans Tichy and Alois Delug. His early success at the Academy was abruptly interrupted by the outbreak of the First World War. Under the impression of the war Gassler dedicated his works more intensive melancholic subjects. From 1925 until 1927 he lived in Paris and travelled to Italy, South of France, Prague, Vienna and Carlsbad. From 1927 he lived in Carlsbad and designed porcelain and glass for Moser and other Czechoslovak manufactures and worked on murals and theatrical scenery. From 1928 until 1939 he was a member of the Wiener Secession (Viennese Secession) and then also a member of the Künstlerhaus. After the Second World War Gassler moved to Vienna, where he stayed for the rest of his life. His preferred subjects were still lifes, portraits and landscapes. He did a lot of frescoes in Bohemia and Moravia and did sceneries for the theater in Carlsbad. Josef Gassler died in 1978 in Vienna.
To:


From:


Message: