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Emerik Feješ

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Emerik Feješ
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Emerik Feješ (Serbian Cyrillic: Емерик Фејеш; Osijek, November 3, 1904 – Novi Sad, July 9, 1969) was a painter; a classic of Serbian Naïve art.

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Biography

He was born in Osijek in 1904 in the Croatia-Slavonia (Kingdom of Hungary, Austria-Hungary, from 1918 part of the Serb-Croat-Slovene Kingdom) to a poor family of mixed Hungarian-Serbian heritage (original surname of his family was Stefanović / Стефановић[1]). At the age of five he moved to Serbia with his parents and spent his life in Novi Sad, where he began to paint in 1949 after his serious illness and retiring. Between two world wars he worked as a button-maker, second-hand dealer, comb-maker, shop assistant and lathe operator in various towns of former Yugoslavia. During World War II he lived in exile, in Hungary, and in 1945 he returned to Novi Sad. Feješ suffered from asthma and sciatica throughout his life, keeping him bed-ridden. In 1949, he discovered painting and handicrafts, and began his first works. In 1969 Feješ died in Novi Sad, leaving behind many buttons and combs, and hundreds of pictures that are much admired for their lack of inhibition and universal appeal.[2][3][4][5]

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Artistic Style

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Emerik Feješ began his artistic career with depictions of nudes, portraits, still life, and genre scenes from suburban life. From 1954 onwards, he focused exclusively on urban landscapes. His first exhibition took place in 1955, followed by a solo show in 1956.

Feješ is considered a significant figure in the depiction of urban landscapes within the realms of naïve art and outsider art in the South–Slavic region. Despite a high degree of artistic freedom and stylistic abstraction, his compositions remained within the bounds of the recognizable. He often used black-and-white postcards depicting monumental architecture as templates. These were transferred to larger formats using carbon paper, with imaginative elements added in the process.

The realistic appearance and coloring of buildings were subordinated to his artistic vision, often resulting in representations that strongly deviated from the originals. His motifs included cities along the Adriatic Coast, in England, Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, France, India, and the North Sea region.

Feješ’s distinctive visual language is marked by unique formal elements. Architectural features such as arches and architraves were sometimes represented by domino friezes, while windows or oculi were replaced with scattered buttons. His color palette is characterized by warm, vivid tones and a Fauvist intensity. His works are notable for the absence of narrative elements, instead emphasizing abstract forms, geometric tendencies, rhythmic structures, flatness, and ornamental detail.

The human figure played a minor role in Feješ’s work. Instead, his compositions featured colorful, rhythmic arrangements that created dynamic, almost musical visual effects. These compositions conveyed a joyful and unique atmosphere, often described as visual rhapsodies of shapes and colors.

Feješ lived a reclusive life and struggled with health issues. During his lifetime, his work received little public attention. Only posthumously did he gain wider recognition. His paintings reflect a highly personal and playful visual world, shaped by a childlike perception and a strong desire to transform the grey of everyday life into something vibrant and imaginative. He is a world classic today.[5]

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Exhibitions

He exhibited his urban legends worldwide and many times received awards and recognition. The greatest and most representative collections of his works are in Museum of Naïve and Marginal Art (MNMA), Jagodina, Serbia, in Croatian Museum of Naïve Art, Zagreb, Gallery Elke und Werner Zimmer, Düsseldorf; and Zander Collection, Cologne, Germany, etc.

References

Literature

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