Octavian Smigelschi

Octavian Smigelschi
Octavian Smilgeschi, self-portrait
Self-portrait
Born(1866-03-21)March 21, 1866
DiedNovember 10, 1912(1912-11-10) (aged 46)
Resting placeBlaj, Romania
NationalityAustro-Hungarian (Romanian)
Alma materDrawing School and Art Teachers' College
Known forMural art, printmaking, modelli, icon painting, illuminated manuscript
Notable workInterior painting at Sibiu Orthodox Cathedral
MovementRomanticism, Naturalism, Academic art, Symbolism, Art Nouveau, Luceafărul, Baia Mare School
AwardsRomanian Expo prize for icon painting (1906)
Vilmos Fraknói (1907)

Octavian or Octav Smigelschi (last name also Smigelski, Smighelschi, Szmigelszki, or Szmigelschi; Hungarian: Szmigelszki Oktáv; 21 March 1866 – 10 November 1912) was an Austro-Hungarian painter and printmaker, one of the leading culturally Romanian artists in his native Transylvania. Of mixed Polish, Aromanian, and possibly Ruthenian, background, he identified mainly with the Romanian-speaking Greek-Catholics, although some of his most important work was also done for the rival Romanian Orthodox Church. Smigelschi studied under Bertalan Székely at the Drawing School and Art Teachers' College in Budapest, becoming familiar with the historicist trend in contemporary Hungarian art. While working on and off at high schools in Upper Hungary and Transylvania, he experimented with borrowings from ancient Romanian handicrafts. Smigelschi's European journeys with Arthur Coulin took him to Cervara di Roma, where he studied Renaissance art, while moving away from academic art and into Symbolism and Art Nouveau.

Modernizing themes from Romanian folklore and Byzantine art, from 1903 Smigelschi focused his effort mainly on Christian art and modelli, including initial work for decorating Blaj Cathedral. He was among those commissioned to paint Sibiu Orthodox Cathedral, which required him to study religious art in the neighboring Kingdom of Romania. Smigelschi's "new vision" combined elements of Symbolism into the Orthodox tradition—a synthesis also found in his murals for smaller churches throughout Transylvania, and in his work on icons. His contribution was relatively ignored in Romania, but well-liked in Transylvania and Transleithania at large, earning Smigelschi the Vilmos Fraknói prize in 1907. After living as an expatriate in Rome, he died of a heart disease while he was preparing to focus his work on Hungarian churches.