Gerhard Nesvadba, Impressionist
Gerhard Nesvadba was born in 1941 in Ober-Ramstadt near Darmstadt, in western
Germany. There are many talents that this artist possesses to a very high degree,
such as the masterful domination of form and a well developed feeling for harmonizing
colors. Although these skills are not as highly valued as they ultimately should
be, the ability to draw has been one of the prerequisites for any artistic
creativity throughout all art history. This is certainly another area in which
Nesvadba has even more expertise.
He completed his formal education in 1958 and began painting as an independently
thinking artist. In 1962 Gerhard was married and moved to Vienna, where he and
his wife had four children. There he settled down as a self-employed and independent
painter and illustrator.
Gerhard participated in his first group exhibition in Stockholm in 1968. For
the next several years he participated in additional exhibitions culminating
in his first one-man show in Marble Hall of the Abbey, Copenhagen in 1971. At
this exhibition, the Austrian Federal Ministry for the Arts and Education, the
famous graphic collection, Albertine, and the Art Promotion Association in Copenhagen,
purchased his works.
In 1971 he received a scholarship from the Ministry for the Arts and an offer
for teaching as a professor of the Arts. Nesvadba was a professor at the Ministry
for several years until he decided to pursue painting full-time and to devote
more time to raising his family. His son Christian is an artist of renown, who
was influenced greatly by his father.
Gerhard Nesvadba belongs to the small cadre of genuinely skilled artists who
have an innate command of the foundations of composition, color and light. Traditional
in approach yet extremely personal in application, his rural landscapes and cottage
scenes are effused with tranquil sunlight and his love of his work is evident
in every piece.
His work appears exclusively in Oregon at Alessandro’s.
The Gerhard Nesvadba Gallery