Age, Biography and Wiki

Joseph Szabo (painter) was born in 1925 in Nyúl, Hungary. He is a painter and photographer who is best known for his photographs of teenagers in the 1970s. He has been featured in numerous exhibitions and publications, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Szabo studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Budapest, Hungary, and later at the University of California, Los Angeles. He has been a professor of photography at the University of California, Los Angeles, and at the University of Arizona. Szabo's work has been featured in numerous exhibitions, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He has also been featured in publications such as The New York Times, The Guardian, and The New Yorker. Szabo is 85 years old and has an estimated net worth of $1 million. He has earned his wealth through his career as a painter and photographer. He has also earned money through the sale of his artwork and photographs.

Popular As Szabó József
Occupation N/A
Age 85 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1925, 1925
Birthday 1925
Birthplace Nyúl, Hungary
Date of death 2010 (aged 84–85) - Fons-sur-Lussan, France Fons-sur-Lussan, France
Died Place Fons-sur-Lussan, France
Nationality Hungary

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1925. He is a member of famous with the age 85 years old group.

Joseph Szabo (painter) Height, Weight & Measurements

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Joseph Szabo (painter) Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Joseph Szabo (painter) worth at the age of 85 years old? Joseph Szabo (painter)’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Hungary. We have estimated Joseph Szabo (painter)'s net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
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Timeline

2016

Joseph Szabó was one of the great loners. There are combinations of quaint figures in his compositions: they might be poor in spirit of the Bible, embittered souls of Dostoyevsky, and some of his French critics had felt like they have impressions of his homeland's people, Hungarian peasants' figures, but these bodies bring the same memories back that attach spectators of the pictures to Flemish and Dutch painting of 16th and 17th centuries. Peasant wedding and fairs, tricksters and admirers of natural phenomena, audience gathered for the sermon of John the Baptist or groups envisioning monsters of shuddering legends – all of them are in his pictures like in the compositions of Brueghel, Bosch and their contemporaries.

2010

Early paintings of Szabó, as well as some of his artworks from connecting periods, have already been exhibited, individually or in groups, in France and several other countries. Fundamentally, paintings of the last period did not leave the artistic home of Szabó, and neither did he. They all bear the design signature of Szabó, but, with few exceptions, are not signed by him. The painter explained it in 2010, the year of his death, this way: “... technically, they are nearly completed, two or three corrections are missing, and they would be 50% better with a coating”.

1967

He was invited to the United States in 1967, where he could see again several of his artworks in the greatest galleries of Chicago, and at exhibitions of the highest quality works. He could sell his paintings made in France at a high price, but he took no delight in works he created there and could barely sell them at half-price. He returned to France after three months. On an occasion of an exhibition in Paris, television showed some of his artworks and commented them as the powerful expression of the artist's feelings and misery saturated with Hungarian temperament.

1953

In 1953, after graduating from the University, he was granted a significant scholarship; he acquired a studio, and his financial situation allowed him to lead a lifestyle that was hungered after by many of his contemporaries. But he felt like a prisoner and experienced feelings of vulnerability because of obligations imposed by the politics of the Communist state. In 1956, borders were open toward the West, and he decided to make his boyhood dream happen, so he left Hungary moving to France. He was admitted to the Paris Academy of Art with a scholarship. Despite his successes (he won the first prize of the foreign artists' exhibition), he suffered from isolation, and felt lost in Paris without encouragements. He realized that mediocre paltriness was extolled without limits, and second- and even third-rate artists were successful thanks to practices that were always rejected and despised by him out of honesty.

1925

Joseph Szabó – birth name: József Szabó (1925, Nyúl, Hungary – 2010, Fons-sur-Lussan, France) – was an emigrant Hungarian painter and sculptor. He studied at Hungarian University of Fine Arts in Budapest between 1947 and 1953. His teachers were István Szőnyi, László Bencze (painter), Gyula Pap (painter) and Jenő Barcsay. He immigrated to France in 1956. He continued his education in the field of fine arts in Paris, then in Nice. Initially, he painted surrealistic and dark pictures full of sombre colours that recall paintings of Grünewald and Bosch. By the late eighties, he came quite near to the limits of abstraction, and turned toward a more liberated, more colourful and less figurative art. Later, he painted expressive pictures with mosaic effect. In addition to paintings, he made sculptures as well; one of his monumental creations stands in front of the building of Médiathèque François Mitterrand in Sète, France. His paintings were exhibited in several art galleries, inter alia in Zurich, Chicago, New York, Montreal, Paris, Lyon, Nimes, Madrid, Milan and Geneva.

He was born in 1925, in Nyúl that is near to the city of Győr, Hungary. He was of a peasant family, and spent his childhood living in poverty together with his seven brothers and sisters. When he was only nine years old, his teacher was amazed by his exceptional drawing talent, but he could only move at the age of twenty-two to Budapest, in 1947, due to dire financial situation of his family, to commence his studies at Hungarian University of Fine Arts. Here, he met groups of intellectuals of Budapest, attended theatre performances, discovered music, and proved to be quite gifted at it as well, but ceased his musical studies soon thereafter to bestow all his energy on painting.