Two Men at the Bar

Odo Dobrowolski

  • Two Men at the Bar 2
Basic information
ID
Г-I-611
Author
Odo Dobrowolski
Name
Two Men at the Bar
Date of creation
1908–?
Technique
drawing
Material
cardboard watercolour Indian ink
Dimensions (height x width, cm)
39 x 26
Additionally
Type
graphic art
Genre
genre art
Information about author
Author
Odo Dobrowolski
Artist's lifetime
1883–1917
Country
Austro-Hungarian Empire
Biography
Odo (Otton) Dobrowolski (1883, Chernivtsi – 1917, Kyiv) was a Lviv artist of Polish-German origin. He is mainly known as a graphic artist, particularly a watercolourist, a master of pastels and lithographs. His parents were Jozef Dobrowolski, the Austrian governor of Galicia-Lodomeria, and Eugenia Wittich. Apparently, the artist was named after Otto the Great, the first emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. He graduated from the gymnasium in Lviv. In the mid-1900s, Dobrowolski was in Krakow as a non-degree student of the Academy of Fine Arts. Between 1908 and 1909, thanks to the support of the artist Jan Styka, he was in Paris and then in Munich for a short while. After returning to Lviv between 1909 and 1910, the artist made an oil decorative panel for the confectionery of Gabriela Zapolska, a famous playwright, actress, and a bright representative of the Lviv elite. In 1911 and 1912, he was in Paris again. Then he was in Lviv, where during the Russian occupation he created a series of 10 lithographs, which were very popular. In June 1915, during the retreat of the Russians, the artist went to Kyiv, where he died under uncertain circumstances at the age of 34 in 1917. The artistic heritage of Odo Dobrowolski includes numerous cityscapes, particularly views of Lviv and Paris, as well as portraits, interior sketches, and images of nature. The works are stored in Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery, as well as in the National Museum in Krakow, the National Library in Warsaw, the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw, and private collections.
Object description
The work is dated according to the period in which the artist explored the theme of the self-portrait with a skull. In this composition, the same skull replaces the face of the main figure; it wears the same broad cap as in the artist’s 1908 self-portrait. Behind the bar stand two figures, drinking beer from steins. The figure on the right is dressed in an elegant light suit and long coat, with a skull for a head, topped by a cap, and holding a cigarette between its teeth. To the left stands the second figure, turned away from the viewer, wearing a long coat with a fur collar; he also has a skull for a head, crowned with a top hat. On the bar shelves are a clock and bottles. The composition is rendered in a contrasting colour palette.
Legal regulation
Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery