Josef Karl Rädler

1844 -1917

“Josef Karl Rädler was a turn-of-the-century autodidact whose compelling canon of double-sided watercolours document life at the pioneering Mauer-Öhling open-air hospital. It was there that this once successful entrepreneur transformed himself into The Court Painter of Austria, Siam and Italy, an astounding portraitist whose depictions of fellow inmates startle with serenity and silence. Rädler’s oeuvre celebrates these forgotten many, harrowed by the bloodiest of wars. He studies them as the seasons shift, seeking comfort in the daily routine and the camaraderie of an evening card-game. Dazzling passages of text, poetry and dogma decorate every edge, showing off the author’s extensive knowledge of literature and his growing fascination with Freudian trends. Strange to think that Rädler remained outside art history until a body of his material was uncovered in the mid-1960s. Since then, his reputation has evolved and he is today considered one of the great finds of early 20th century European art. The frontal figuration of this self-appointed philosopher-poet-pacifist is clearly a contemporary aesthetic whose star is destined to shine.” - Source: The Museum + Gallery of Everything, 2019

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Martin Ramirez