Age, Biography and Wiki

György Kovásznai was born on 15 May, 1934 in Budapest, Hungary, is a director,writer,animation_department. Discover György Kovásznai's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 49 years old?

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Occupation director,writer,animation_department
Age 49 years old
Zodiac Sign Taurus
Born 15 May, 1934
Birthday 15 May
Birthplace Budapest, Hungary
Date of death 28 June, 1983
Died Place Budapest, Hungary
Nationality Hungary

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 15 May. He is a member of famous Director with the age 49 years old group.

György Kovásznai Height, Weight & Measurements

At 49 years old, György Kovásznai height not available right now. We will update György Kovásznai's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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György Kovásznai Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is György Kovásznai worth at the age of 49 years old? György Kovásznai’s income source is mostly from being a successful Director. He is from Hungary. We have estimated György Kovásznai's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income Director

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Timeline

1934

György Kovásznai (1934-1983) was born on 15 May 1934 in Budapest, Hungary.

1944

In 1944 Kovásznai's foster father was called upon for military service in Austria with his family. During their time away from Budapest the family lost their home, and all of their personal belongings.

Returning to Budapest at the end of 1944, the family had to start life all over again, and lived in poverty from that time onwards.

1945

Art in Europe since 1945", featuring one of Kovasznai's films alongside works by Fernand Léger, Damien Hirst, Tadeusz Kantor, Richard Hamilton, Gerhard Richter and Boris Christo.

1950

Around the same time, in the late 1950's, Kovásznai started holding semi-illegal artistic gatherings at a friend's house.

1954

Kovásznai attended the Budapest College of the Fine Arts, but gave up his studies in 1954, at the age of 20. He then worked as a miner for a year and a half, in an effort to get some first-hand experience with the working class. However, the artist soon became completely disillusioned, as he found that "people hate struggle, great slogans and politics. They pay attention to them only as long as they suffer from them. . .

1956

"In 1956 Kovásznai was readmitted to the Budapest College of the Fine Arts, but was dismissed the following year before receiving his diploma.

1958

From 1958 to 1974 he worked as the editor and columnist of Nagyvilág, a significant Hungarian arts and literary journal, in which he published some of his criticism and paintings. He came to know writers and literature critics during his time at the journal.

1960

An avant-garde artist community of 50-200 people came together several times a week, until the end of the 1960's. It emerged decades later that his best friend, who hosted these sessions, had been passing on information about Kovásznai to the counterintelligence agency throughout the years.

1961

In 1961 Kovásznai started to work at the Pannonia Film Studio, Hungary's main animation film studio, initially as a playwright, but soon moving on to make his own films.

1968

A significant part of his oeuvre reflects on the spring and summer of 1968, and the events in Paris and Prague. His take on the Prague Spring, which culminated in the Soviet invasion, was expressed in his short film "Memory of the summer of '74". In this movie a cockroach-like creature and a black, windowless train form a sharp contrast with a world of summer joy, full of pop music and pretty girls.

1980

Kovásznai was diagnosed with a serious form of leukaemia in 1980, but refused to be treated and ran away from the hospital, so that he could create his final monumental series of paintings and write his great summarizing essay on art theory.

1983

He continued to work at the studio until his death in 1983. Over the course of his career at the studio he made 26 short films, a mini TV-series and a musical-animation feature film. However, his animations were only shown for brief periods of time in cinemas, or not at all. Kovásznai never had an opportunity to exhibit his paintings and drawings in his lifetime. Politically, Kovásznai was attached to Marxism, yet had an ongoing conflict with the ruling regime.

He died in 1983. Kovasznai was primarily a painter, who practiced the art of painting on both canvas and the cinema screen and he is often seen as a free-spirited, universal artist whose work cannot be classified into any known artistic school of thought. His unique oeuvre consists of paintings and drawings, as well as experimental animation films in which he attempted to "animate" the art of painting - which was an approach entirely different from mainstream animation. As he once put it: "Perception in terms of movement, in terms of a series of non-isolated phenomena, is a life philosophy". During an era increasingly dominated by the growing momentum of socialism (both intellectually and aesthetically), Kovasznai consciously and defiantly attempted to pass between genres: "It's about time that these representatives of the traditional, classical, but over-materialistic genres leave behind their departmentalized-to-death roles. " - he said. Discussing Kovasznai's impact today Hungarian sociologist, Ferenc Hammer wrote: "Do you remember Peter Parker's first fight in Spider-Man? When he is attacked by a bullying schoolmate, the viewers are made to see through Parker's eyes that the opponents are moving in different time dimensions. For Parker, the fierce attack appears as a slow-motion shot. This is why those involved in the scene perceive Parker to be moving at a paranormal speed. Before the dazzled eyes of posterity, Kovasznai appears -for lack of a better definition- as a Gesamtkunst artist, whose works of total art keep evading the force of systematizing interpretation. While spellbound audiences keep gaping at the painted figures that abandon their frames, marvelling at the artist who side-step genre delimitations in a flash, let us conjure the aquarium of silence that surrounds Parker, with the noises of the outside world deadened into a hollow mumble.

1990

Upon seeing his works, many Western artists and animators were surprised that they came from Socialist Hungary, due to their experimental, artistic and at times adult nature, as well as their social critique. However Kovásznai and his works remained very poorly known even in his home country, and only in the 1990s and 2000s did people begin to rediscover them.

1997

The TV movie Körúti esték (1997) is about his life.

2000

"Since the early 2000s the Kovasznai Research Centre has worked to preserve and promote Gyorgy Kovasznai's oeuvre. Initially the Research Centre focused on cataloguing, restoring and digitalising all aspects of Kovasznai's work (paintings, drawings, films, and writings) and it now seeks opportunities to present the work to the public. As Kovasznai had no opportunity to exhibit his work during his lifetime, and his films had only been accessible in cinemas for very limited periods of time, the first stage of the Foundation's work was to establish his crucial role within the history of Hungarian contemporary art.

2010

In 2010 the first ever Kovasznai retrospective took over an entire wing of the Hungarian National Gallery to critical and public acclaim, accompanied by a comprehensive monograph.

2011

In 2011, the Research Centre hosted a joint exhibition of South African artist William Kentridge and Kovasznai's work at the Museum of Fine Arts in Budapest, which featured installation-based animated films by both artists. Speaking about Kovasznai's work, Kentridge said: ''Seeing. . . Kovasznai. . . what felt very familiar was kind of the impetus and the essentialness and the emergency of making. That it felt like an emergency. That work has to be made non-stop. . . . Whether it is in charcoal, or thick oil paint, whether it is a view of Johanessburg or Budapest, that seems secondary to the pressure for, the pressure for making, and the excess of making. . . seeing his work my immediate thought was I want to be back in the studio making something. There was kind of a collegial fury of creation which is a main thing that I kind of got, got from him.

"In autumn 2011, a Kovasznai exhibition was held at the Collegium Hungaricum Berlin, Germany.

2013

Between October 2012- February 2013 the Deutsches Historisches Museum of Berlin hosted an exhibition titled "The Desire for Freedom.

2014

The exhibition later set out on a journey to Milan, Tallin and Krakow to last until January 2014.

2016

At the beginning of 2016 the Research Centre introduced György Kovásznai to the British fine art scene via a major solo exhibition at the Somerset House in London.

The event was a major success both with the academic audience and the general public, and it opened up doors for the international promotion of Kovásznai's oeuvre: In November 2016 Kovásznai's "Ca Ira" pictures are exhibited alongside works by William Kentridge and four emerging artists as part of the show titled "Creative Fury" in London's Clerkenwell Gallery. Meanwhile Kovásznai's animation films have been widely featured in the programme of film festivals around the world, including the Queensland Film Festival in Australia, the Eyeworks Festival of Experimental Animation in the US and the Manchester Film Festival in the UK.

Kovásznai's short films have also been included in the programme of Art Basel Miami 2016.