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Robert Hammerstiel

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Robert Hammerstiel (18 February 1933 – 23 November 2020) was an Austrian painter and engraver. His works are influenced by Serbian icon painting, wood-cut engraving and pop art.[1] Hammerstiel was internationally recognized and received numerous awards. His home town installed a museum dedicated to his art.

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Hammerstiel was born in Werschetz/Vršac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia, in a family of German expatriates.[1] His father, Anton Hammerstiel, was a baker who also painted icons; his mother was Therese Hammerstiel, née Schiff. He attended German and Serbian primary schools.[2]:6 Towards the end of World War II, the Germans were expelled. Hammerstiel was deported to Zichydorf internment camp; his mother to a different camp.[2]:6 In 1947, he escaped with his mother and brother, first to Hungary where they lived from charity. They moved further to Austria. In Ternitz in Lower Austria, they lived in the village Pottschach, where Hammerstiel remained a resident for life. Hammerstiel became an apprentice to be a baker in 1949. When his father, who had been held as a prisoner of war, returned in 1950, he interested his son in painting and drawing, and also instructed him in icon painting. Robert Hammerstiel painted portraits and landscapes of the surroundings. He completed the baker’s training in 1951 but from 1955 worked in the local steel industry. The following year, he married Margareta Speringer.[2]:6

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Hammerstiel took part in a competition of the Austrian Federation of Trade and won a prize, which resulted in studies of art.[2]:7 Parallel to his work, he began to study at the Wiener Kunstschule in 1959, first with Gerda Matjeka-Felden, and from 1963 to 1965 with Robert Schmitt, Gerhard Swoboda, August Swoboda and Hans Stockbauer.[2]:7 His topics, beginning in the 1960s, became faceless figures.[2]:4 He exhibited internationally from 1974. In 1985, he was awarded the honorary title Professor.[2]:7[3]

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In 1988, he left his work in the steel industry and became a freelance artist.[2]:7 His works were exhibited in the Austrian Culture Institute in New York City, where he was exposed with American painting, and used radically bright colours for his compositions.[2]:4 He was the author of Von Ikonen und Ratten: Eine Banater Kindheit 1939 – 1949 (with 32 woodcuts, Brandstaetter: Vienna, 1999); and illustrator of several books including Des Bischofs Kleid by Luisa Owens (2013). In 2007, he wrapped the Ringturm in Vienna with a painting measuring 4,000 m2 (43,000 sq ft).[1] It shows stations of human life in simplified and brightly-coloured figures.[3]

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