Bookplate of Dr. Semseyandor

Jozef Szuszkiewicz

  • Bookplate of Dr. Semseyandor 2
  • Bookplate of Dr. Semseyandor 3
Basic information
ID
ФМз-Г-IV-493
Author
Jozef Szuszkiewicz
Name
Bookplate of Dr. Semseyandor
Date of creation
1965
Country
Poland
Technique
colour linocut
Material
paper
Dimensions (height x width, cm)
5.5 x 8.2
Additionally
Information about author
Author
Jozef Szuszkiewicz
Artist's lifetime
1912–1982
Country
Austro-Hungarian Empire, Poland
Biography
Jozef Szuszkiewicz (1912, Lviv, Austro-Hungarian Empire – 1982, Tarnow, Poland) was a painter, graphic artist, and one of the founders of the Ludwik Solski Theatre in Tarnow. Teacher and director of the Lyceum of the Arts in Tarnow. Szuszkiewicz studied at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts under Tadeusz Pruszkowski’s and Leon Wyczolkowski’s guidance. He participated in the Polish September Campaign of 1939, during which the Germans took him prisoner. After his release, the artist returned to Lviv, where he stayed until 1944. He later moved with his family to Tarnow. Member of the Association of Polish Artists, Jozef Szuszkiewicz participated in the first three national Biennales of Graphics in Krakow (1960, 1962, 1964) and also exhibited his works at the 10th World Congress of Ex Libris (Krakow, 1964). The artist’s solo exhibitions occurred in many cities across Poland and abroad. Szuszkiewicz’s work includes landscapes, portraits, still lifes, graphics, ex-libris designs, and projects for stained glass and polychromy for churches and chapels. His works are preserved in the Tarnow, Katowice, Wroclaw, and Lviv museums.
Object description
Bookplate of Dr. Semseyandor.
Inscriptions
To the right below the image, there is the artist's signature in pencil and the date "65". On the back at the top, the number "139" is written in a triangle with a pencil. Below, there is an inscription: "Szuszkiewicz. Ex libris of Semseyandor, colour linocut, 1965, 5.5 х 8.2; 10.4 х 14.5". Lower right is a seal in purple paint: "Jozef Szuszkiewicz".
Legal regulation
Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery