Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Thomas Resetarits
Austrian sculptor (1939–2022) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Thomas Resetarits (born Tome Rešetarić, 25 November 1939 – 18 May 2022) was an Austrian sculptor, who created art in public spaces, especially in and around churches, including the Eisenstadt Cathedral.
Remove ads
Life
Summarize
Perspective

Tome Rešetarić[1] was born in Stinatz,[2] Austria, the son of Franjo and Justina Tome Rešetarić,[3] who belonged to the Croatian minority in Burgenland. He began carving wood sculptures as a school pupil.[1][3] He trained to be a stonemason in Graz from 1955, completing his training in 1957.[1] He worked in Vienna and later for a stone industry firm in Salzburg. In 1964, he passed the master's examination in Vienna.[4] He studied from 1965 at the Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien.[4]
Resetarits married elementary school teacher Herta Flasch in 1966 and began working as a freelance sculptor.[4] He travelled to Rome, Hungary, Croatia, Germany, Mexico, the U.S., India, New Guinea, South America, South Africa, and China to gain inspiration for his work.[1] He became a member of the association Friedhof und Denkmal (cemetery and monument) in Kassel.[5]
Resetarits worked mostly in stone, wood, and bronze.[2] From 1970, he received many commissions from the Diocese of Eisenstadt to design altars, altar areas, and Stations of the Cross.[2] From 1974 to 1976, he also worked as an instructor in a prison in Eisenstadt.[2] He created Kontakt, a tall bronze sculpture, for a panoramic rest area near Bernstein on the Burgenland Straße (B 50) in 1987. In addition, he designed stained glass windows from 1990, received commissions for public spaces, and worked as a book illustrator.[1]
Resetarits lived and worked in Wörterberg, Burgenland.[2] He died at the age of 82 after a prolonged illness.[2][6][7][8]
Remove ads
Works in public space
- 1971: Altar relief (oak), Glashütten, Burgenland[3]
- 1974: Altar area (marble), Stegersbach parish church , Burgenland[3][7]
- 1976: Altar area, Krankenhauskapelle in Güssing, Burgenland[3]
- 1980: Virgin of Mercy, portal of the Eisenstadt Cathedral, Burgenland[2][3]
- 1981: Flügelaltar (linden), Oberschützen, Burgenland[3]
- 1983: 15 Stations of the Cross, Woppendorf, Burgenland[3]
- 1985: Bronze door, Eisenstadt Cathedral[3]
- 1986: Altar and Stations of the Cross, Bad Tatzmannsdorf[9]
- 1987: Kontakt (bronze), rest area Bernstein, B 50
- 1988: Triptychon, Kanonikerhaus in Eisenstadt, Burgenland[1][3]
- 1990: Altar area, Filialkirche Sulz im Burgenland[3]
- 1991: Altar area (cherry wood), Pinkafeld parish church , Burgenland[3]
- 1994: Stations of the Cross (limestone), Donnerskirchen, Burgenland[10]
- 1996: Stations of the Cross (granite), Kegalberg next to Pfarrkirche Rohrbach bei Mattersburg, Burgenland[3]
- 1996: Altar area (wood), Schwarzenbach, Lower Austria[3]
- 1999: Altar area (marble), Heiligenkreuz, Lower Austria[3]
- 2000: Altar area (serpentinit), Badersdorf[3]
- 2003: Stations of the Cross (wood), Neudorf, Burgenland[3]
- 2003: Europabrunnen, 6th Europa-Symposium Kaisersteinbruch , Bruckneudorf[11]
- 2007: Altar area, Rust, Burgenland, Burgenland[3]
Gallery
- Kontakt at Bernstein panoramic rest area, B 50
- Stations of the Cross, Kegalberg in Rohrbach bei Mattersburg
- Altar and Stations of the Cross in Sulz
- Stone relief for "Burgenlandkroaten" in Kaisersteinbruch
Remove ads
Exhibitions
Book illustrations
- 1977:
- 1983: Weihnachten ist jeden Tag, Dr. J. Frank, Morsak Verlag, ISBN 978-3-87553-213-5
- 1988:
- 1990: Du bleibst bei uns. Ein Kreuzweg, Josef Dirnbeck , ISBN 978-3-7022-1743-3
- 2003: Die Sandalen des Moses, Alfons Jestl, publication PNº1 (Bibliothek der Provinz Weitra), ISBN 3-85252-551-9[4]
- 2007: Die Fee im Kirschbaum (drawings), Alfons Jestl, publication PNº1 (Bibliothek der Provinz Weitra), ISBN 978-3-85252-746-8[4]
Remove ads
References
Further reading
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads