Ignaz-Marcel Gaugengigl - The Dandy

(click on picture for larger view)

Ignaz-Marcel Gaugengigl
Paussau, Bavaria 1855 – Boston 1932

The Dandy
signed in the upper right I.M. Gaugengigl, and inscribed on the original backing I.M. Gaugengigl 1905, "the Irresistable"

oil on panel

11"×7" (28 cm×19 cm)

PROVENANCE:
Frederick Winslow Taylor (formulator of the industrial philosophy of Scientific Management) and thus by descent to his son Robert Potter Aiken Taylor who donated it to an East Coast institution who deacessioned it in 2000

NOTE: Gaugengigl was Bavarian by birth, the son of a professor of Oriental languages. He was trained in Munich at the Royal Academy beginning in 1874, working with Johann Raab and Wilhelm von Diez. After studies in Italy and Paris, Gaugengigl came to Boston by 1878. His meticulous, small-scale work and ornate historical subject matter soon earned him the nickname "the Meissonier of America". He exhibited work at the Guild of Boston Artists and the St. Botolph Club with great success. Gaugengigl was a highly regarded social figure and connections brought him lucrative portrait commissions. Beginning in the mid-1890s, he depicted many prominent Bostonians in both small panel pictures and occasionally larger canvases. He was on the Council of the Museum School for twenty years as well as one of the directors of the Guild of Boston Artists.

 

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This page was last modified on August 15, 2006