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Krzysztofowicz-Kozakowska, Stefania [Editor]; Malkiewicz, Barbara [Editor]; Muzeum Narodowe <Krakau> [Editor]; Gołubiew, Zofia [Editor]; Blak, Halina [Editor]; Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie [Editor]
Modern Polish painting: the catalogue of collections (Band 2): Polish painting from around 1890 to 1945 — Cracow, 1998

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.31381#0197
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HANNYTKIEWICZ | HARLAND

159

Adam HANNYTKIEWICZ (HANYTKIEWICZ) bm
Bom in Cracow in 1887 — Died in Wroclaw in 1946
In the years 1906-1910 he studied at the Cracow Academy of Fine Arts, having as his professors
Jozef Pankiewicz, Leon Wyczolkowski and Stanislaw Dybicki. In 1909 he started working as
a drawing teacher in various schools in Cracow, at Wieliczka, at Inowroclaw and, finally, in Poznan,
where he came to stay in 1919. In 1926 he founded there the School of Fine Arts, which he
headed until 1934. In 1924 and from 1932 to 1933 he lived in Paris, where he exhibited his works.
He spent the time of the German occupation in Cracow; after World War II he moved to Wroclaw,
appointed to a professor’s post in the Higher School of Fine Arts in that city. He belonged to the
group “Fine Arts.”
Landscapes and still lifes predominate in his creation: he also painted portraits and figural
compositions. The influence of the French post-impressionism is visible in his works.
Hannytkiewicz occupied himself additionally with artistic criticism.
411.
Still Life, [ca. 1920]
Oil on canvas, 38.5 x 43.8
Signed bottom right: AHannytkiewicz
Inv. no MNK II-b-3436
Purchased from Jan Gottwald in 1988

412.
Woman Making Up Her Mouth, 1940
Oil on cardboard, 60 x 48
Signed and dated bottom right:
AHannytkiewicz 40.
Inv. no MNK II-b-3223 (record no 184)
Unknown provenance

Anna HARLAND (HARLAND - ZAJACZKOWSKA) bm
Bom in Lvov in 1883 — Died in Lvov in 1930
She obtained her artistic education in the private drawing school of Stanislaw Kaczor Batowski in
Lvov and in Tola Certowicz’s School of Fine Arts for Women in Cracow, consecutively in the
Kunstgeweibeschule in Munich and at the Academie Colarossi in Paris. She also undertook
artistic travels to Italy, Yugoslavia, England and Austria. On her return to Poland she stayed in
Lvov. She was a co-founder of the Association of Polish Ladies Artists, and a member of the
Association of Ten Artists in Lvov.
She painted decoratively stylized landscapes, townscapes, and portraits.
She was additionally engaged in book illustrations, as well as in designs of posters, vignettes, and
kilims.
 
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