Category Archives: Csaba Markus

A Departing Moment with Csaba Markus

Park West Gallery presents our new exclusive video series: “A Departing Moment.” Spend an intimate moment with eight prominent Park West Gallery artists. In this first episode, you’ll hear from Hungarian contemporary artist Csaba Markus.

And don’t miss upcoming episodes, including artists like Lebadang, Robert Kipniss, Anatole Krasnyansky and more! Subscribe to Park West Gallery’s YouTube Channel

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Fine artwork by Csaba Markus is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea. For more information, please visit www.parkwest-markus.com.

All You Need is Love, and Csaba Markus

“Creativity begins with an affinity for something.
It’s like falling in love. There is an emotional connection.
I want to bring passion and beauty into peoples’ homes
as my work speaks of love, purity and strength of spirit.

When I began painting, I was thinking about music.
I asked myself, what was the most influential and important music
of the century? Of course, there can always be arguments about this,
but my choice was the Beatles. They were always authoritative,
exciting, and innovative and every song was a love song.

I thought, why can’t I emulate this through my art?
I started to paint love songs on canvas, and immediately I began
to have the same enthusiastic reception that the Beatles had.

—CSABA MARKUS (January 26, 1953 – )

"Europea" by Csaba Markus, Park West Gallery“Europea” by Csaba Markus | Park West Gallery Fine Art Collection

There are many other painters in the world, but many Park West Gallery collectors will tell you that there is only one whose paintings can create such contrasts within such harmony, one who can express the Eternal Feminine in her many guises, both as mortal woman and as mythological goddess. There is one who does not paint merely to please the eye, but to shake the soul of the viewer.

There is only one, and his name is Csaba Markus.

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Exclusive artwork by Csaba Markus is available for purchase through Park West Gallery and its cruise art auctions at sea. Visit the Park West Gallery Fine Art Collection

Read the article, “Csaba Markus, Aesthetic Olympian,” written by Park West Gallery Director Morris Shapiro. 

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Google Doodle Celebrates Paul Cezanne’s Birthday

Be sure to visit the Google homepage today for a colorful tribute to one of the world’s most celebrated artists in history!

Paul Cezanne, Google Doodle, Park West Gallery

Today’s Google Doodle celebrates the birthday of the “Father of Modern Art,” Paul Cezanne (January 19, 1839 – October 22, 1906). The French artist was a highly influential figure in 20th century art, a pioneer in the Post-Impressionist movement and inspiration for the Cubist movement. (Learn more about Cezanne at Park West Gallery Artist Biographies.)

The search engine explained that today’s Google Doodle was actually created by combining traditional oil painting techniques with modern technology. A still-life oil painting was made and then reconstructed into digital format. Google illustrated the process via the image below (the original painting is shown at the top left and the final Doodle at the bottom left).

Paul Cezanne, Google Doodle, oil paintingJan. 19, 2011: Today’s Google Doodle commemorates Paul Cezanne’s 172nd birthday.

In the following short clip, Park West Gallery Director Morris Shapiro and contemporary artist Csaba Markus discuss the master, Paul Cezanne, during a visit to the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts.

Enjoy more exclusive artist videos at the Park West Gallery YouTube Channel

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Park West Gallery Retrospective Features Acclaimed Artists and Rare Works of Art

Previously unreleased artwork unveiled to the public for the first time in decades, world-renowned artists in attendance during exclusive art collector’s cruise

SOUTHFIELD, Mich. — Park West Gallery, now in its 42nd year as a leading fine art dealer, recently curated a landmark retrospective featuring never-before-seen artwork by world-renowned artists – Yaacov Agam, Csaba Markus and Igor Medvedev. The retrospective was unveiled before one hundred Park West Gallery VIP collectors aboard Norwegian Epic cruise ship, during its December 4-11, 2010 sailing. Original paintings, one-of-a-kind drawings and limited-edition graphic works were released from the archives and offered for sale.


[Pictured above: 2) Art Auctioneer Jason Betteridge; 3) Park West Gallery Director Morris Shapiro; 4) Igor Medvedev; 5) Csaba Markus; 6) Yaacov Agam. All photos copyright ©Park West Gallery. All rights reserved.]

Hosted aboard Norwegian Cruise Line’s largest and most innovative Freestyle Cruising ship, Park West Gallery’s Norwegian Epic retrospective highlighted some of the finest artwork ever produced by artists Yaacov Agam, Csaba Markus and Igor Medvedev. Much of the artwork was kept in the private collection of the artists, previously unseen by the public and unavailable to collectors for decades – until now.

“This retrospective and art auction continues Park West Gallery’s mission of bringing fine art to people all over the world,” said Albert Scaglione, CEO and founder of Park West Gallery. “We were proud to introduce some of our most loyal collectors to these acclaimed artists, each of whom has enjoyed a profound relationship with Park West Gallery for many, many years. The experience of meeting and spending time with artists like Agam, Markus and Medvedev is a unique opportunity which Park West Gallery is pleased to be able to afford our collectors.”

Each of the artists was able to present their works and spend time talking at length with Park West Gallery collectors. The artists were able to interact with collectors throughout the cruise, providing insight into their lives and aesthetic. “Meeting the artists onboard the ship was really the highlight of the cruise; not just reading about them, or seeing their artworks in a museum, but actually meeting them,” said Park West Gallery client Sylvia Sawh from Trinidad. “I think that was wonderful on Park West’s behalf, to bring the artists onboard and have them meet their buyers.”

Historically significant works, dating back as far as the 1950s, were gathered from all over the globe and brought together for the retrospective. This was the first Park West Gallery event and an inaugural cruise for Yaacov Agam.

Israeli artist Yaacov Agam is known as the father of kinetic art. His works were featured in a 1980 retrospective at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York and are currently part of a permanent installation at Le Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. Csaba Markus is one of the most widely collected contemporary artists, with works displayed in prestigious art galleries throughout the world and commissioned pieces hanging in some of the most exclusive private collections in the United States. California-based artist Igor Medvedev‘s works are eagerly collected around the world. In 2002, Park West Gallery published the catalog raisonée of Medvedev’s serigraphs, featuring an introduction by Dr. Anthony Janson, co-author of the most widely read art history textbook, Janson’s History of Art.

To inquire about purchasing artwork from the Park West Gallery Fine Art Collection, visit www.parkwestgallery.com or call toll-free (800) 521-9654 x 4.

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Csaba Markus, Aesthetic Olympian

Csaba Markus, Park West Gallery Csaba Markus “Veritas” (2006) | Park West Gallery Collection

~Written by Morris Shapiro, Park West Gallery Director~

In the contemporary world of art a battle is currently raging. As the 20th Century clicked over to the 21st, it provided a convenient demarcation point for this struggle, but it has really been ongoing for at least 90 years. The conflict is about the search by artists of our time for the fundamentals of aesthetics which have long ago been “thrown under the bus.”

The word, “aesthetic” is derived from the Greek word, “aesthesis,” which means “perception with feeling,” and in so simple a joining of two phenomena, the entire history of western art criticism has rested. Perception of course deals with the sensorial response to art: what we perceive and experience through our limited senses as we take in what exists before us for contemplation. Feeling, results in what we take from that contemplation and from whatever “information” our senses provide. That is, how the information affects the perspective we bring to the contemplation of an artwork. That perspective is made up of our emotions, our experiences, our education, our dispositions, our passions, our prejudices and the myriad other qualities that define who we are each individually.

All through the storied evolution of aesthetic philosophy two halves have formed the whole of the aesthetic experience. They are the “yin and yang” of art and their measure must each be taken to develop a true analysis of any work of art in any medium. “Form” is the physical body, the manifestation in concrete reality of the work of art before us. In the visual arts (for which we will confine our discussion here) form may include the medium employed, the size or format of the work, the use of line, color, texture, contrast, the composition of the work, or any number of other “physical’ attributes. “Content,” on the other hand, is what the work of art is communicating to us as we experience it during contemplation. All art has something to communicate, even if the communication is about the absence of communication.

In 1917, when French artist Marcel Duchamp created the first “Readymade” by signing with a fictitious name an inverted urinal and titling it Fountain, the true iconoclastic struggle of aesthetic “life and death” began. By proclaiming that something was art, because the artist claimed it to be, the aesthetic experience was transformed into a kind of  artistic narcissism, a constant contextual rumination by art asking itself, “Am I art, or am I not art?” 

For nearly one hundred years now, artists, historians, museums, art educational institutions, galleries, auction houses and collectors have embraced and legitimized these types of artistic creations and conceptualizations. It serves no purpose here to dwell on the embodiment of these “artworks.” We are all familiar with the dirty ashtrays, the sharks in formaldehyde, the crucifixes in urine, the Plexiglas boxes of trash and the thousands of other manifestations of what author Donald Kuspit in his book, The End of Art (2004, Cambridge University Press),  has aptly named, “postart.”

“Post-artworks” have been included in exhibitions with great fanfare and have fetched in the auction and gallery markets dramatically high prices, especially when compared to works by artistic masters of the past. To some extent, these “works” have been derided and ridiculed in the popular press and have caused their fair share of controversy, but essentially they have continued to flourish unimpeded in their own elitist milieu, where they focus on lifting up those things which were once considered banal, meager, ordinary and even repulsive into the highest realms of  “Fine Art.”

Csaba Markus, Park West GalleryCsaba Markus “Dance and Conquest” (2008) | Park West Gallery Collection

The Pendulum
A comprehensive investigation into the history of art ultimately reveals that if only one thing can be counted on, it is that artists (and consequently their creations) will react strongly to the art of their time. Often this reaction will be in the form of pushing back against the grain of the accepted art of the times, i.e. the art that is seen as respected, legitimate, important, and valid. 

Even deeper investigation will often reveal that the polar opposites that drive the pendulum of art history from one side to the other are grounded in the artistic ideals found in form and content and these in turn can be seen as the overarching characteristics of the pendulum’s extreme positions. A good example of this can be found in the distinction between classical art, which is grounded in the principles of purity and adherence to nature’s forms, and romantic art, which is about imagination, myth, and mannerism. Again, this is not the appropriate place for a long discussion of these historical observations, but suffice it to say that the difference between Caravaggio (classical) and El Greco (romantic), is a good example. These artists existed in nearly the same time and yet Caravaggio, by embracing the notion of a kind of painting that was focused on a depiction of true reality (right down to the dirt under the fingernails of the subject), created a new form of art in direct opposition to El Greco’s flamboyant and mystical interpretations of another world that existed beyond the tangible one.

“So what does any of this have to do with Csaba Markus?” you might ask. Well, I have had the good fortune to have many discussions with Csaba about these very subjects. And Csaba is a true student of art history. Just by looking at his art one assumes this. And like every great artist I have met (and the great ones from the past that I have only read about), being well steeped in the history of art, and understanding their place in its context, is of paramount concern to them.

I am fortunate to have a life immersed in art. It surrounds me every day. I research it, buy it, sell it, talk to people about it, and teach others to speak of it. I hear the questions, comments and concerns of collectors, both novice and seasoned. And when I speak of these contemporary issues, of art which causes the viewer to scratch his head and say, “So what?” after contemplating the “postart” that has besieged our world, I get more often than not, the same response: “Please teach me something. Enrich my experience. Enlighten me through the labors of your art. Show me something about life and the world in which I live that I did not know before I experienced your creative spirit. Help me to walk away from the contemplation of your art and feel enhanced.” Sadly, in most cases none of these questions are answered or desires fulfilled. Here it once again appears (after 3,000 years of human artistic consideration): the cry for a true aesthetic experience, “perception with feeling”—and people are indeed crying out for it. They are deprived and starved for it.

Enter Csaba Markus. An aesthetic Olympian, a man whose entire existence is driven to create an art which elevates, amplifies and exhilarates those who encounter it. Csaba, through his art and his complete emersion in its creative processes, is at the forefront of this battle for aesthetic supremacy in an art world which has mostly turned its back on the ideals of beauty.

Csaba knows this. He sees the big picture. He senses that something big is happening now. He understands his place in the history of our time, and he is positioning himself and his art now to be experienced far into the future. He talks to other artists when he is brought together with them through the events sponsored by Park West Gallery. He sees a new way in which art is being brought to the world. A new way in which people who would never have previously had any inclination or disposition to even contemplate experiencing and collecting art, are now engaged and even passionate about the change in their lives brought to them through these experiences. When Csaba speaks of these things his eyes widen, his gestures become broad, his voice booms and he communicates in a bold and vivid manner that runs parallel to his art. A manner that makes him instantly recognizable as a champion, a gladiator for the ideals that formed millennia of masterpieces but are often eschewed and ridiculed today. The quest for beauty: Csaba sees the pendulum beginning to swing back the other way, and he is pulling on it hard.

Stand before a painting by Csaba Markus. At once you know it’s the “real deal.” Before your eyes is a work of art that immediately communicates to the viewer the technical mastery possessed by this artist. Csaba has “chops.” He has studied the techniques of Leonardo, Durer, Raphael, Titian, Rembrandt and one hundred other old masters. Likewise, he commands the compositional devices and nuances of the abstract painters and the expressionists. His intention, he has told me, is to create a work that bridges centuries of artistic stylization. And one that is beyond any categorization, any label or generality.

When you look at a painting by Csaba he wants you to bring your own experience to the work. He wants it to be the point of departure for your imagination as your eyes drink in the face of a gorgeous, timeless woman; an airy iconic space full of floating images, symbols and visual touchstones for poetic association; gestures of pure shape and pigment, tonal flourishes, fields of color, ribbons of linear arabesques dancing across the surface. Csaba’s works introduce an artistic world that is fully formed. They present an ideal and harmonic blend of form and content. They are rigorous in their artistic vocabulary and express themselves effortlessly, and yet they are also full of stories to tell, as long as our intuition, spirit and imaginations are willing to listen. To Csaba, the act of creating beauty is once again paramount. To leave the viewer with a sense of wonder and awe that the human imagination can be so potent, that miraculously from nothing but a blank canvas and some pigments, a work of art so evocative and powerful can be born. This is Csaba’s goal. To bring back aesthetic beauty into the art of our times is the reason why he was put on this earth.

Who can say how his work will be viewed in one hundred, two hundred, five hundred years? God willing that there are still people on this planet. And if so, I know that art will still be here. I know that people will still look at a Rembrandt painting and weep. I know that future generations will still be moved by the spiritual purity and sacrifices made by Van Gogh to create his art. I know that people will still attempt to grasp the protean genius of Picasso. I also know (or perhaps believe is more appropriate), that the pendulum will have swung back sometime in our 21st Century. And future historians my scratch their heads and wonder, “What were they thinking?” when they look back in the history books at the remnants of paintings made of spaghetti, sculptures made of old shoes lying in a sled, and “artist shit” in cans (Piero Manzoni). They may very well then set the book down and glance over at their two hundred-year-old Csaba Markus painting hanging on the wall, and be grateful for the artistic crusaders of the early 21st Century who brought back the love of beauty and set humankind and art back on the path of aesthetic glory. 

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Learn more about Csaba Markus at the Park West Gallery Artist Biographies or view selections of the artist’s works from the Park West Gallery Collection.

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There is Nothing More Artistic Than to Love Others

Big Love IX by Simon BullArt is not the application of a canon of beauty but what the instinct and the brain can conceive beyond any canon. When we love a woman we don’t start measuring her limbs.”
~ Pablo Picasso

Love is probably the strongest and most fulfilling emotion we will experience and it underlies and informs all our enthusiasms…we, as ordinary beings become transformed for the better by love. We are literally filled with emotion, which engenders a positive outlook and truly engages us with others and the world…”
~ Peter Nixon

“Poetry and painting are done in the same way you make love; it’s an exchange of blood, a total embrace – without caution, without any thought of protecting yourself.”
~ Joan Miro

Rhapsody Love by Csaba Markus“Creativity begins with an affinity for something. It’s like falling in love.”
~ Csaba Markus

“In our life there is a single color, as on an artist’s palette, which provides the meaning of life and art. It is the color of love.”
~ Marc Chagall

“Through art, I want to share a part of myself. I want people to see the love that I put into it.”
~ Marcus Glenn

Love wants to rise, not to be held down by anything base… He who loves flies, runs, and rejoices; he is free and nothing holds him back.”
~ Henri Matisse

Crazy in Love by Alex Gockel“(My work) comes from the love to paint. That’s the love that runs in my blood and is the center of my life.”
~ Itzchak Tarkay

Love is when the desire to be desired takes you so badly that you feel you could die of it.”
~ Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

“The more I think about it, the more I realize there is nothing more artistic than to love others.”
~ Vincent van Gogh

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Park West Gallery Art Expo 2008

To celebrate Park West’s 40th anniversary, more than one-hundred fine art auctioneers, associates and trainees from Plymouth Auctioneering -  providing services for Park West cruise ship art auctions at sea - attended an unprecedented semi-annual conference and Art Expo during October 1 – 6, 2008.

Anatole Krasnyansky (L) and Itzchak Tarkay (R)

Anatole Krasnyansky (L) and Itzchak Tarkay (R)

Forty artists from around the globe –  including Itzchak Tarkay, Peter Max, Yaacov Agam, Csaba Markus, Emile Bellet, Anatole Krasnyansky and Marko Mavrovich – were flown in and provided with complementary accommodations for the special event, along with thirty of Park West’s most distinguished VIP couples who also attended the festivities.

I was taken away by the entire experience of the conference. The opportunity to meet and talk to so many of the artists that Park West represents was truly an experience of a lifetime. I now have a much more intimate feeling of Park West, how it operates and the amazing people involved in making the company what it is today,” said associate auctioneer, Hooman Shad.

Attendees were treated to an opening ceremony and fine dining at the prestigious Ritz Carlton in Dearborn, Michigan. At the historic Henry Ford Museum everyone enjoyed full access to the museum’s displays of impressive innovations and inventions. Guests were exulted by the entertainment at Detroit’s luxurious MGM Grand Casino and Ignite Lounge. And finally, the ultimate culinary feast was had by all during the farewell party at the Roostertail, often host to celebrities including Tony Bennett, Eric Clapton, the Rolling Stones and Aretha Franklin.

The Art Expo featured an introductory lecture by visionary pop artist, Peter Max, and other guest speakers included representatives from Kinkade and Disney Studios.

Csaba Markus

Csaba Markus painting at Park West Gallery

In addition to first-class auctions offering some of the best artwork in the Park West collection, auctioneers, trainees and VIPs had the opportunity to mingle and engage in discussions with the artists. Some artists, like Csaba Markus, were so inspired by the ambient creative energy that they set up mini-studios throughout Park West Gallery exhibition spaces. Onlookers enjoyed a rare glimpse into the creative process as they watched their favorite artists paint live before their eyes.

VIP guests, Tom and Judy of Corona California, complimented “The VIP event was awesome! The whole Park West staff went above and beyond to make it truly memorable. The friends we made and memories we shared will last for a long time.

 

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Csaba Markus: Pursuit of the American Dream

October 13, 2008 – Columbus Day commemorates the anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ arrival in the Americas. The United States has always represented freedom, hope and a land of opportunity; especially to Park West Gallery artists like Csaba Markus, who began his life and career under the constraints of Communism in Budapest, Hungary.

Phoenia Palais by Csaba MarkusThe name of artist Csaba Markus is oddly prophetic, like the foreshadowing in a well-written novel or even the suggestion of god-like intervention in an ancient myth. There is his given name, Csaba which means ‘he who leaves his country’; and his last name, Markus which is a traditional Hungarian surname derived from Mars, the Greek god of war. Both names are intensely meaningful for a man who left his native country to pursue his dream of becoming an artist, fiercely determined to overcome the many obstacles which fate had place in his path.

Csaba’s artistic development, however was hindered by the rigorous controls of the Communist system in his native country. His desire for individuality and recognition clashed with the ideals of the Communism, and the young man realized that he could not mentally survive in such a restrictive environment. Leaving friends and family behind, Markus left Hungary in 1978, and eventually settled in California, determined to fulfill his destiny as a great artist. After many years of tireless endeavor, Markus’s artistic prowess was properly recognized, and his paintings were introduced to an eager work audience.

Amazingly, the artwork of the fierce and independently spirited man who grew up on the streets of Budapest has found acceptance and appreciation in many corners of the world. Markus’s distinctive style, which has been shaped by the varied influences and experiences of his unusual life, has an undeniably universal appeal. His work is currently displayed in prestigious art galleries throughout the United States, England, France, Russia, and Japan, and his commissioned pieces hand in some of the most exclusive private collections in the United States.

From the untrained child who purchased a handful of oil paints to copy a Rembrandt painting, to the man who left his own homeland in search of artistic freedom, and whose beautiful works have finally found commercial success and recognition across the globe. The prophecy of his name has been fulfilled, as Csaba Markus looks back and reflects upon the incredible and occasionally harrowing journey through life that he has taken. “It is only now,” he says, “that I can recognize that I am living my dream.”

Excerpted from “Csaba Markus: Gems and Rhapsodies”. Publisher, Dreaming Muse. Copyright, 2004.

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