Slawa on Sigmund Jaray furniture in the Duldig flat in Vienna in 1931
Slawa and Karl in Vienna in 1938.
He continued studying at the Akademie der Bildenen Künste (1925-9). In 1931 in Vienna, Karl married fellow art student Slawa Horowitz (1902-75). Sigmund Jaray, famed Austrian furniture designers, was commissioned by Slawa to design furniture for their flat, decorated in the Viennese Workshops style. Meantime Slawa invented amodern foldable umbrella, holding the patent for 10 years.
The musical examined pre-war Vienna, with fluky events that helped them survive, starting from Nazi Austria after the 1938 Anschluss. And 1938 was the year daughter Eva was born! In 3 continents & 3 generations, the musical reflected both the losses that dislocated families suffered, and the challenges faced when adapting to new lives.
Like others in 1938 & 1939, the Duldigs had to give their surviving assets to Nazis and flee! Slawa's adored sister and brother in law Aurelie & Ignaz Laisné survived the Holocaust by hiding in Paris, with Karl’s artworks stashed in their cellar.
There was a brief time in Switzerland when Karl was playing in a tennis tournament. In 1938 the family grabbed the chance to get to Singapore, working in an art school in the British colony. But in Sep 1940 they were declared Enemy Aliens by the British who deported them to Australia.
Because Australia was also at war, the family was interned at Tatura Camp in rural Victoria for 2 years, The camp was peaceful but isolated. While Karl did kitchen duty in 2nd AIF 8th Employment Co., he carved Mother and Child 1942 from potatoes with a pocket knife. Later he cast them in bronze.
Released in April 1942, the family settled in urban Melbourne and became Australian citizens post-war. Karl held his first solo show at Kozminsky’s (1947) and became art master (1945-67) at a prominant Melbourne grammar school, while creating a small ceramics business. Karl exhibited regularly with the Victorian Sculptors’ Society and the important Adelaide Festival of Arts from 1960. Slawa’s work appeared in the major NGV 1990 exhibition, Vienna & Early C20th.
There was a brief time in Switzerland when Karl was playing in a tennis tournament. In 1938 the family grabbed the chance to get to Singapore, working in an art school in the British colony. But in Sep 1940 they were declared Enemy Aliens by the British who deported them to Australia.
Because Australia was also at war, the family was interned at Tatura Camp in rural Victoria for 2 years, The camp was peaceful but isolated. While Karl did kitchen duty in 2nd AIF 8th Employment Co., he carved Mother and Child 1942 from potatoes with a pocket knife. Later he cast them in bronze.
Released in April 1942, the family settled in urban Melbourne and became Australian citizens post-war. Karl held his first solo show at Kozminsky’s (1947) and became art master (1945-67) at a prominant Melbourne grammar school, while creating a small ceramics business. Karl exhibited regularly with the Victorian Sculptors’ Society and the important Adelaide Festival of Arts from 1960. Slawa’s work appeared in the major NGV 1990 exhibition, Vienna & Early C20th.
Driftwood: escape and survival through art, was a book written by Eva Duldig in 2017. It followed the artists’ lives in pre-war Vienna and their escape from Europe to Melbourne. And it offered an insight into the cultural life of Australia at a time of enormous political and artistic change; a profound transforming contribution to the life of the nation through talented immigrants. Note the enormous contribution middle Europeans made to the national art scene. Yosl Bergner (left Warsaw 1937); Wolfgang Sievers (Germany 1938); Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack (Berlin 1938); Mark Strizic (Germany post-war).
Driftwood was a new Australian musical, based on Eva’s book. Adapted for the stage by playwright Jane Bodie, it featured original music by Anthony Barnhill, with lyrics by soprano Tania de Jong, and a fine cast directed by Wesley Enoch. Note that Eva’s real daughter, Tania de Jong with the fabulous voice, played Eva’s mother Slawa in the musical.
Karl and Slawa continued their art careers. After high school, Eva did physical education and arts at Melbourne Uni and worked as a teacher. Then her father, himself a highly ranked sportsman, encouraged her into competitive tennis. The family moved near the Kooyong Tennis Courts, and in 1961 she reached Wimbledon’s quarter finals.
At the 1961 Maccabiah Games in Israel, she met her Dutch husband Henri and went to live in Holland. She became Netherlands’ National Champion and represented her new country at Wimbledon. They didn’t move back to Australia until after the birth of Eva’s first child in 1964.
With the talented European artists who were living 12,000 ks from home and speaking little English, Duldig helped define the place of sculpture in Australian culture. He was very supportive of younger artists, becoming first president (1962) of Ben Uri Society for the Arts aka Bezalel Fellowship of Arts. He was president (1977) of the Association of Sculptors of Victoria. His last work was the Raoul Wallenberg monument 1985 at Kew Junction.
Driftwood was a new Australian musical, based on Eva’s book. Adapted for the stage by playwright Jane Bodie, it featured original music by Anthony Barnhill, with lyrics by soprano Tania de Jong, and a fine cast directed by Wesley Enoch. Note that Eva’s real daughter, Tania de Jong with the fabulous voice, played Eva’s mother Slawa in the musical.
Karl and Slawa continued their art careers. After high school, Eva did physical education and arts at Melbourne Uni and worked as a teacher. Then her father, himself a highly ranked sportsman, encouraged her into competitive tennis. The family moved near the Kooyong Tennis Courts, and in 1961 she reached Wimbledon’s quarter finals.
At the 1961 Maccabiah Games in Israel, she met her Dutch husband Henri and went to live in Holland. She became Netherlands’ National Champion and represented her new country at Wimbledon. They didn’t move back to Australia until after the birth of Eva’s first child in 1964.
With the talented European artists who were living 12,000 ks from home and speaking little English, Duldig helped define the place of sculpture in Australian culture. He was very supportive of younger artists, becoming first president (1962) of Ben Uri Society for the Arts aka Bezalel Fellowship of Arts. He was president (1977) of the Association of Sculptors of Victoria. His last work was the Raoul Wallenberg monument 1985 at Kew Junction.
Before Karl died in 1986, he and Eva discussed what would happen to the house and collection. As custodian of her parents' legacy, Eva opened the home, sculpture garden and art Studio in Malvern East up as a public museum in 1996, showing the large collection of fine and decorative arts. And in the National Gallery Victoria.
In Karl Duldig and Vienna, Alison Inglis presented a paper at Vienna Art and Design symposium, NGV 2011. She showed his experience as an art student-sculptor in Vienna pre-1939 was full of Secessionist values. The unexpected recovery of all their Viennese art and other possessions in Melbourne suggested the Duldigs’ old lives wouldn’t be lost forever.
In Karl Duldig and Vienna, Alison Inglis presented a paper at Vienna Art and Design symposium, NGV 2011. She showed his experience as an art student-sculptor in Vienna pre-1939 was full of Secessionist values. The unexpected recovery of all their Viennese art and other possessions in Melbourne suggested the Duldigs’ old lives wouldn’t be lost forever.
Extraordinary lives. Having to move so much would have destroyed others, but they seemed to thrive on the disruption and contribute so much.
ReplyDeletejabblog
Deletenot only did the family share some of the most talented genes in Austria and later Australia. But living closely with family members meant they could share teaching, personal care, finances and professional supports in the community.
I loved my dad, for example, but if I wanted him to get me into a top class art school, he wouldn't have known what I was talking about.
When you discussed Viennese furniture by Sigmund Jaray about 15 years ago (ha ha), I found The Victorian Collections on line. But I don't think I have ever been to the Duldig Studio. Would Jaray furniture still be collected there?
ReplyDeleteDeb
DeleteVictorian Collections said the Járay’s firm was an important Viennese manufacturer of Kunstmöbel/art furniture. Slawa was adopting the custom of Viennese couples to furnish their homes with bespoke furniture from the interior design firms flourishing in Vienna.
See material held in the National Gallery of Victoria collection; a suite of furniture by Josef Hoffman; and a suite of furniture by Adolf Loos. Discover the art, home and legacy of Viennese-Australian artists Karl and Slawa Duldig in East Malvern.
Duldig family's journey from Vienna to Melbourne is not only a testament to resilience and creativity, but a powerful reminder of how art can both preserve history and shape a nation's cultural identity
ReplyDeleteWhen people of my age think of post WWII immigration to Australia, we think of workers who were brought here to work in lower paid and manual jobs, not of the artists who arrived here and enriched the country's cultural life.
ReplyDeleteAndrew
DeleteThat might have been the government's real motivation, but Australia became a much more multi-cultural and enriched society once the Italians, Greeks and others arrived in the 50s and 60s. When the cleverest children studied medicine, law and education after 1956, the lectures could have been in Polish, Hungarian etc.
roentare
ReplyDeleteagreed. When countries turned ships around so that would be migrants drowned at sea or were gaoled in camps, I always think how brutal and short sighted some nations are. Migrants bring a work ethic and cultural richness that should be celebrated.
A hard life they had but they left a wonderful collection, Hels.
ReplyDeleteMargaret
Deleteagreed. They DID leave a wonderful collection of their works eg Karl exhibited regularly with the Victorian Sculptors’ Society and Adelaide Festival of Arts. And my favourite was Slawa’s work in NGV's 1990 exhibition, "Vienna & Early 20th century".
But Karl's contribution was broader than that; he became first president of Bezalel Fellowship of Arts and president of the Association of Sculptors of Victoria.
Boa Noite. Uma excelente quarta-feira e com muita paz e saúde. Confesso que não conhecia a história. Sempre aprendo algo novo, com seu maravilhoso trabalho. Obrigado por compartilhar tantas matérias e que eu não conhecia.
ReplyDelete