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{{eastern name order|Mednyánszky László}}
{{Bio
{{Infobox artist
|Nome = László
|Cognome name = László Mednyánszky
| image = Ladislav Mednyánszky.jpg
|PostCognomeVirgola =([[lingua slovacca|slovacco]]: ''Ladislav Medňanský'')
|PreData caption = o barone ''Ladislao Josephus Balthasar EustachiusLászló Mednyánszky''
| birth_name = ''Ladislaus Josephus Balthasar Eustachius Mednyánszky''
|Sesso = M
| died at age of = 37
|LuogoNascita = Beckov
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1852|4|23|df=yes}}
|GiornoMeseNascita = 23 Aprile
| birth_place = Beckó (Beckov), [[Kingdom of Hungary]] (today [[Slovakia]])
|AnnoNascita = 1852
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1919|4|17|1852|4|23|df=yes}}
|LuogoMorte = Vienna
| death_place = [[Vienna]], [[Austria]]
|GiornoMeseMorte = 17 aprile
| nationality = [[Hungarians|Hungarian]]
|AnnoMorte = 1919
| field = [[Painting|Painter]]
|Attività = pittore
| training =
|Epoca = 1800
| movement = [[Impressionism]]
|Attività2 =
| works =
|AttivitàAltre =
| patrons =
|Nazionalità = slovacco
| awards =
|PostNazionalità =, di lingua [[ungherese]]
|Immagine = Ladislav Mednyánszky.jpg|thumb|Ladislav Mednyánszky
|Didascalia = Ladislav Mednyánszky
}}
 
Baron '''László Mednyánszky'''<ref>Marcel Cornis-Pope, John Neubauer, History of the literary cultures of East-Central Europe: junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2006, p. 173 [http://books.google.com/books?id=5pAwqsSyTlsC&pg=PA173&dq=Baron+Laszlo+mednyanszky&hl=en&ei=gTkXTc3uMMmwhAemsOyaBQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAw#v=snippet&q=Baron%20L%C3%A1szl%C3%B3&f=false]</ref> ({{lang-sk|Ladislav Medňanský}})<ref>Ladislav Medňanský: (súborné dielo) ; [Bratislava SNG, október - november 1979] [http://books.google.com/books?id=zs-rMwAACAAJ&dq=Ladislav+Mednansky&hl=sk&ei=MY99Tqz4GdHssga1k9Ea&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAQ]</ref><ref>Slovak history: chronology & lexicon [http://books.google.com/books?id=3orG2yZ9mBkC&lpg=PA247&dq=Ladislav%20Med%C5%88ansk%C3%BD&hl=sk&pg=PA249#v=onepage&q=Mednansky&f=false]</ref><ref name="Múzeum Slovenského vizuálneho umenia. 2011.">Múzeum Slovenského vizuálneho umenia. 2011. [http://muzeum.artgallery.sk/pouzivatel.php?ArtGallery_Session=2b&getPouzivatel=24]</ref> (23 April 1852 – 17 April 1919) or ''Ladislaus Josephus Balthasar Eustachius Mednyánszky'' Mednyánszky, the painter-philosopher, is one of the most enigmatic figures in the history of Hungarian art.<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iBKTAAAAIAAJ&q=Laszlo+Mednyanszky+hungarian&dq=Laszlo+Mednyanszky+hungarian&hl=en&ei=EjkXTf2QINWAhAfkzuy2Dg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CCoQ6AEwAQ Lajos Németh, Modern art in Hungary, Corvina Press, 1969, p. 27]</ref><ref name=Hun>{{cite book|title= Made in Hungary: Hungarian Contributions to Universal Culture|last =Simon|first=Andrew L.|pages=57|url=http://books.google.hu/books?id=cMxL4OUv-gEC&pg=PA57&lpg=PA57&dq=L%C3%A1szl%C3%B3+Medny%C3%A1nszky+Hungarian+painter&source=web&ots=2XQbe0ahzf&sig=kFGX7A94qxH1HE98AkjVNdMFbks&hl=hu|year=1998|isbn=0966573420}}</ref><ref name=NYT>{{cite news|title=Budapest As a City Of Museums|publisher=''[[The New York Times]]''|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE3DE143DF931A35753C1A96E948260&scp=12&sq=L%E1szl%F3+Medny%E1nszky&st=nyt|date=2 October 1988|accessdate=13 May 2008 | first=Mary | last=Simons}}</ref><ref name=NY>{{cite news|title=ART REVIEW; Foreigners in Strange Lands, But at Home in the World|publisher=''[[The New York Times]]''|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9804E6DE1430F932A25752C0A9629C8B63&scp=2&sq=L%E1szl%F3+Medny%E1nszky&st=nyt|date=11 January 2004|accessdate=13 May 2008 | first=Benjamin | last=Genocchio}}
Nonostante un' origine aristocratica, ha trascorso gran parte della sua vita di artista viaggiando per l'Europa alternando lunghi periodi di isolamento, con altri in cui si mescolava con le persone di tutte i ceti sociali - nobili, artisti, contadini e soldati - molti dei quali divennero i soggetti dei suoi dipinti.
</ref> Despite an [[aristocracy|aristocrat]]ic background, he spent most of his life moving around Europe working as an artist. Mednyánszky spent considerable periods in seclusion but mingled with people across society - in the aristocracy, art world, peasantry and army - many of whom became the subjects of his paintings. His most important works depict scenes of nature and poor, working people, particularly from his home region in [[Kingdom of Hungary]]. He is also known as a painter of Slovak landscape (Upper Hungary) and Slovak folk.<ref name="Múzeum Slovenského vizuálneho umenia. 2011." />
Le sue più importanti opere raffigurano paesaggi naturali, mendicanti e persone al lavoro, in particolare della sua regione d'origine nel Regno d'Ungheria .
 
==BiografiaBiography==
[[File:Mednyánszky László sírja.jpg|thumb|right|The gravestone of László Mednyánszky in the [[Kerepesi Cemetery]], [[Budapest]].]]
Nacque a [[Beckov]] in [[Slovacchia]] (allora parte del [[Regno d'Ungheria]]), da Eduard Mednyánszky e Maria Anna Mednyánszky (nata Szirmay), entrambi ricchi proprietari terrieri. Discendeva da una nobile famiglia con ascendenze slovacche, ungheresi e polacche. Una delle sue nonne, Eleonora Richer era di origine francese . La sua lingua madre era comunque l'ungherese e non è neanche sicuro sapesse parlare in slovacco.
[[File:Mednyanszky.jpg|thumb|left|150px|The 'painter-philosopher' Mednyánszky]]
Mednyánszky famiglia si trasferì nel 1861 al castello di Strážky, di suo nonno, Baltazar Szirmay, a Nagyőr , vicino [[Spišská Belá]], nel nord-est della Slovacchia e questi luoghi sarebbero diventati lo sfondo per molte delle sue opere.
Mednyánszky was born in [[Beckov]], the [[Habsburg Monarchy]] (now Beckov in [[Slovakia]]), to Eduard Mednyánszky and Maria Anna Mednyánszky, (née Szirmay) both from landowning families. He came from a [[Nobility in the Kingdom of Hungary|Hungarian noble]]<ref>Éva Hárs, Ferenc Romváry, [http://books.google.co.uk/books?ei=1wV3TuyvOM-08QOgr_DwDQ&ct=result&id=q-kqAAAAIAAJ&dq=medny%C3%A1nszky+l%C3%A1szl%C3%B3+noble&q=noble#search_anchor Modern Hungarian Gallery, Pécs] Corvina Kiadó, 1981, p. 42</ref> family. Some say he was of [[Slovak people|Slovak]] origin,<ref>Dr. Kurt - Chairman WEHLE. 1971 [http://books.google.com/books?id=vrBtAAAAMAAJ&q=%22The+fact+is+that+many+of+the+great+Hungarian+artists+were+born+to+Slovak+parents+:+Laszlo+Mednyanszky,+Ede+Ballo,+Gyula+Benczur,+Janos+Kmetty,+Gyorgy+Konecsny%22&dq=%22The+fact+is+that+many+of+the+great+Hungarian+artists+were+born+to+Slovak+parents+:+Laszlo+Mednyanszky,+Ede+Ballo,+Gyula+Benczur,+Janos+Kmetty,+Gyorgy+Konecsny%22&hl=sk&ei=CP12TqqzBIrOsgbLr8zECw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCwQ6AEwAA]</ref> however, according to others, he was born into a Hungarian family with [[Poland|Polish]]<ref name="Duba">Gyula Duba, [http://www.hhrf.org/szabadujsag/szemle/isz0410.htm#Duba Mednyánszky], Irodalmi Szemle, 2004/10, Translations: "lengyel ősről és a „stiborida” rokonságról-Polish ancestry and 'Stiborida relations'; "Franciaföldről hozta a szép Richer Eleonórát-He (his grandfather) brought his wife from France"</ref><ref>[http://www.watson.sk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=435:nyitravarmegye-nemes-csaladai-achticke-rody-nitrianskej-stolice&catid=47:regionalna-histora--helytoertenet&Itemid=65 Nyitra vármegye nemesi családai (Noble families of Nyitra county)] from: Samu Borovszky, Magyarország vármegyéi és városai. Nyitra vármegye (Counties and towns of Hungary, Nyitra county), 1899, Translation: "(Mednyánszky) családi hagyomány szerint Lengyelországból származott-They were originated from Poland according to the traditions of Mednyánszky family"</ref> and [[Hungarian people|Hungarian]]<ref name="Markója"/> ancestry. One of his grandmother, Eleonora Richer was of [[France|French]] origin.<ref name="Duba"/> His native tongue was [[Hungarian language|Hungarian]] and it is not even sure he could speak in Slovak.<ref name="Markója"/>
 
Mednyánszky's family moved in 1861 to the chateau of his grandfather, Baltazár Szirmay, at Nagyőr ([[Strážky]]), near Szepesbéla ([[Spišská Belá]]) in north-eastern Slovakia. This was to be the setting for many of his works.
Dopo gli studi superiori a [[Kežmarok]], vicino a casa sua, Mednyánszky si iscrisse all' [[Accademia delle belle arti di Monaco di Baviera ]] nel 1872-1873. Insoddisfatto di [[Monaco di Baviera|Monaco]], si trasferì a [[Parigi]] per frequentare la [[École des Beaux-Arts]] . Dopo la morte del suo professore, [[Isidore Pils]] , nel 1875, lasciò l' École e cominciò a dipingere in proprio a [[Montmartre]] .
Mednyánszky met the Austrian artist [[Thomas Ender]] in 1863 when Ender visited the chateau at [[Strážky]]. Ender took an interest in Mednyánszky's early efforts at drawing, lending his assistance to improve Mednyánszky's skills.
Tornò a Nagyőr dopo il 1877 per continuare a dipingere, e successivamente ha viaggiò molto in Europa prima in [[Alta Ungheria]], sua terra natale, poi visitò [[Budapest]] , [[Vienna]] , [[Parigi]]. Nell'autunno del 1877 soggiornò a [[Szolnok]], città che era punto di riferimento degli artisti ungheresi dell'epoca, in seguito fece un lungo viaggio in [[Italia]] dal 1878.
Negli anni successivi visse sempre tra Parigi e Nagyőr: continuò sempre a lavorare pur avendo esposto una sola volta nel 1897 presso la galleria di [[Georges Petit]].
Negli anni tra il 1905 e il 1911 ha vissuto a Budapest, per poi trasferirsi a [[Vienna]].
 
Mednyánszky attended a grammar school in Késmárk ([[Kežmarok]]), near his home, then attended the [[Academy of Fine Arts, Munich|Akademie der Bildenden Künste]] (Academy of Fine Arts) in Munich in 1872—1873. Dissatisfied in Munich, he moved to Paris<ref name=Hun/> to attend the [[École des Beaux-Arts]]. After the death of his professor, [[Isidore Pils]], in 1875, Mednyánszky left the École and began practicing independently from [[Montmartre]].
Allo scoppio della [[Prima Guerra Mondiale]], Mednyánszky era di nuovo a Budapest. Lavorò come corrispondente di guerra sulle linee austro-ungariche in [[Galizia]], in [[Serbia]] e in [[Alto Adige]] e rimase gravemente ferito al fronte. Nella primavera del 1918 tornò a Nagyőr per riprendersi dalle ferite riportate in guerra ma la sua salute non migliorò e dopo aver trascorso ancora qualche mese di lavoro a Budapest, morì nella primavera del 1919 a Vienna.
 
Mednyánszky returned to [[Strážky]] after 1877 to continue painting, and subsequently travelled widely in Europe, between his childhood homes in [[Upper Hungary]] and [[Budapest]], [[Vienna]], Paris and beyond. Mednyánszky visited the [[Szolnok]] artists' colony in the autumn of 1877 and [[Italy]] in 1878. His mother died in 1883, after which he lived in seclusion in Nagyőr. He returned to Nagyőr in 1887 to help deal with an outbreak of [[cholera]] but soon fell ill himself, with [[pneumonia]]. He spent much of 1889-1892 in Paris and returned regularly to [[Strážky]] until 1900. His father, Eduard, died in 1895. Mednyánszky held his only solo exhibition at the [[Georges Petit|Galerie Georges Petit]] in Paris in 1897. For the years 1905-1911 he lived in Budapest, then later moved to Vienna.
==L'opera==
Le opere di Mednyánszky si riconoscono in gran parte nella tradizione [[impressionismo|impressionista]], con influenze provenienti dal [[Simbolismo]] e dall' [[Art Nouveau]] . Le sue opere raffigurano scene di paesaggi naturali nelle diverse stagioni e suoi soggetti preferiti sono i poveri, come i contadini e gli operai. Lo sfondo preferito delle sue opere sono i paesaggi della sua terra, la [[Slovacchia]], dai [[Carpazi]] alla [[Grande pianura ungherese]]. Dipinse anche i ritratti di suoi parenti e amici, e di molti soldati mentre era corrispondente di guerra.
 
When the First World War broke out in 1914, Mednyánszky was in Budapest again. He worked as a [[war correspondent]] on the Austro-Hungarian frontlines in Galicia, Serbia and the southern Tirol. In the spring of 1918 he returned to Strážky to recover from war wounds. After spending some time working in Budapest, Mednyánszky died in poor health in the spring of 1919, in Vienna.
Molte sue opere sono attualmente esposte nella Galleria Nazionale Slovacca di [[Bratislava]] e al castello di Strážky, che è stato donato allo stato dalla nipote Margita Czóbel nel 1972, altre si trovano alla [[Galleria Nazionale Ungherese]] a Budapest. Tuttavia un gran numero delle sue opere sono andate distrutte durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale.
== Galleria ==
<center><gallery widths=240px heights=240px perrow=4>
László Mednyánszky Old Tramp 1880.jpg|''Vecchio Mendicante'' (ca 1880)
Mednyánszky, László - Angler (1890).jpg|''Pescatore'' (1890)
At the Iron Gate.jpg|''[[Porte di Ferro]] sul Danubio''
László Mednyánszky Trees with Hoar-frost 1892.jpg|''Alberi gelati'' (1892)
László Mednyánszky Hildside at Springtime (Little Landscape)1903-04.jpg|''Colline a primavera'' (1903)
Image:László Mednyánszky Courtyard in Winter after 1910.jpg|''Cortile d'inverno'' (1910)
Image:Mednyánszky, László - Camping.jpg|''Accampamento''
Image:László Mednyánszky Edge of a Forest with Crosses 1914-18.jpg|''Foresta con le croci''
Mednyánszky, László - In Serbia (1914).jpg|''In Serbia'' (1914)
Mednyánszky, László - Soldiers Hunting for Lice (ca 1915).jpg|Mednyánszky, László - ''Cercando i pidocchi'' (ca 1915)
László Mednyánszky Soldiers1914-1918.jpg| ''Soldati'' (ca.1914)
File:Aerial Attack.jpg| ''Attacco Aereo''
</gallery></center>
 
==His political views==
==Bibliografia==
He edgily tried to establish an association against the Pan-Slav agitators with [[Béla Grünwald]].<ref>Rezső Szalatnai, [http://books.google.co.uk/books?ei=8qB8TtmtK8St8QOrzfyHAQ&ct=result&id=y74_AAAAIAAJ&dq=Arck%C3%A9pek%2C+h%C3%A1tt%C3%A9rben+hegyekkel%3A+essz%C3%A9k+%C3%A9s+eml%C3%A9kez%C3%A9sek&q=p%C3%A1nszl%C3%A1v#search_anchor Arcképek, háttérben hegyekkel: esszék és emlékezések], Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó, 1969, p. 213 Translation: "...ingerülten próbált egy egyesületet létrehozni a türelmetlen Grünwald Bélával a pánszláv agitátorok leszerelésére-He (Mednyánszky) edgily tired to establish an association against the elimination of Pan-Slav agitators with the unpatient Béla Grünwald"</ref> The Hungarian politician Grünwald banned [[Matica Slovenska]].<ref name="Markója"/> The articles of association of this organization were written by Mednyánszky.<ref name="Markója">Csilla Markója, [http://www.hhrf.org/europaiutas/55/EU55_Mednyanszky.pdf Verekedés után, Mednyánszky a Budapest – Pozsony – Bécs háromszögben], [http://www.hhrf.org/europaiutas/ Európai utas Review], 2004, pp. 22-23 Translations: "Mednyánszky nem csupán magyar családban magyar anyanyelvűként született, és nem is biztos, hogy tudott szlovákul- he (Mednyánszky) was born into a Hungarian family with native Hungarian tongue and It is not even sure that he could speak in Slovak"; "(Grünwald)... betiltotta az 1863-ban alakult Matica Slovenskát-Grünwald banned the Matica Slovenska what was established in 1863"; "A pánszláv mozgalmak ellen életre hívott egylet alapító okiratának Mednyánszky tollából származó tervezete-The assotiation was created against the Pan-Slav movement and the articles of association of this organization were written by Mednyánszky"; ".. pár ezer tagja lett- had a few thousands members" </ref> This association had a few thousands members.<ref name="Markója"/>
* Marcel Cornis-Pope, John Neubauer, History of the literary cultures of East-Central Europe: junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries, John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2006.
* Simon, Andrew L. (1998). Made in Hungary: Hungarian Contributions to Universal Culture. ISBN 0966573420.
* Simons, Mary (2 October 1988). "Budapest As a City Of Museums". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 May 2008.
* Genocchio, Benjamin (11 January 2004). "ART REVIEW; Foreigners in Strange Lands, But at Home in the World". The New York Times. 13 May 2008
 
==Works==
==Collegamenti esterni==
[[File:László Mednyánszky Edge of a Forest with Crosses 1914-18.jpg|thumb|László Mednyánszky: Edge of a Forest with Crosses]]
*[http://www.webumenia.sk/web/guest/home/-/simpleSearch/au/ Slovak art collections]
Mednyánszky's works were largely in the Impressionist tradition, with influences from [[Symbolism (arts)|Symbolism]] and [[Art Nouveau]]. His works depict landscape scenes of nature, the weather and everyday, poor people such as peasants and workmen. The region of his birth, north-eastern part of the [[Kingdom of Hungary]]), part of [[Austria-Hungary]] (today [[Slovakia]]) was the site and subject of many of his paintings; scenes from the [[Carpathian Mountains]] and the [[Great Hungarian Plain|Hungarian Plains]] are numerous. He also painted portraits of his friends and family, and images of soldiers during the First World War<ref name=Planet>{{cite web|title=Hungarian National Gallery|publisher=''[[Lonely Planet]]''|url=http://www.lonelyplanet.com/worldguide/hungary/budapest/sights/145280?list=true}}</ref> whilst working as a war correspondent.
*[http://www.hung-art.hu/frames-e.html?/english/m/mednyans/index.html Opere di László Mednyánszky]
 
His works are currently displayed in the [[Slovak National Gallery]] in [[Bratislava]] and [[Strážky chateau]], which was donated to SNG by his niece Margita Czóbel in 1972.<ref>Slovenska narodna galeria. 2011. [http://www.muzeum.sk/?obj=galeria&ix=sngks]</ref>
== Altri progetti ==
 
{{interprogetto|commons=Category:László Mednyánszky}}
A lot of his works are displayed in the [[Hungarian National Gallery]]<ref name=NYT/> in [[Budapest]]<ref name=Planet/> as well. A large number of his works were destroyed during the Second World War. In 2004 a New York gallery was host to a show of about 70 19th- and early 20th-century [[Hungary|Hungarian]] paintings, and a few works on paper, from the collection of Nicholas Salgo, a former United States ambassador to Hungary<ref name=NY/>. The exhibition's title, ''Everywhere a Foreigner and Yet Nowhere a Stranger,'' was drawn from the diary of the 19th-century [[Hungarian people|Hungarian]] painter Baron László Mednyánszky.<ref name=NY/>
 
===List of works===
 
*''Marshland'' (1880)
(Oil on canvas, 28 x 42&nbsp;cm, [[Hungarian National Gallery]], [[Budapest]])
*''Osiery with Cows'' (c. 1880)
(Oil on canvas, 40 x 60&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Watering'' (c. 1880)
(Oil on canvas, 114 x 201&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Fishing on the Tisza'' (after. 1880)
(Oil on canvas, 153,5 x 49&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Waterside Scene in Luminescent Haze''
(Oil on canvas, 29,5 x 48&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Waterside Scene with Figure''
(Oil on canvas, 85,5 x 99&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''Old Tramp'' (1880s)
(Oil on wood, 17,5 x 13&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Head of a Boy'' (c. 1890)
(Oil on wood, 41 x 31&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Angler'' (1890)
(Oil on wood, 27 x 21&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''View of the Forest'' (1890–91)
(Oil on wood, 32,5 x 22,5&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Trees with Hoar-frost'' (c. 1892)
(Oil on canvas, 36,5 x 29&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Under the Cross'' (c. 1892)
(Oil on canvas, 34 x 50&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Landscape at Autumn'' (1890s)
(Oil on canvas, 101 x 74&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''In the Garden''
(Oil on canvas, 60 x 90&nbsp;cm, Janus Pannonius Museum, Pécs)
*''Peasant Lad''
(Oil on canvas, 55 x 45&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Study of a Head (Nyuli)''
(Oil on canvas, 47 x 32&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''View of Dunajec'' (1890–95)
(Oil on canvas, 98 x 73&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*'''Iron Gate at the Danube'' (1890–95)
(Oil on canvas, 120 x 195&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Mountain Landscape with Lake''
(Oil on canvas, 80 x 100&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Lake in the Mountains'' (1895–99)
(Oil on canvas, 33 x 41,5&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Thawing of Snow'' (1896–99)
(Oil on canvas, 120 x 140&nbsp;cm, Dobó István Castle Museum, Eger)
*''Head of a Tramp'' (c. 1896)
(Oil on wood, 45 x 34,5&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Absinth Drinker'' (c. 1898)
(Oil on canvas, 35 x 26,5&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Down-and-out'' (after 1898)
(Oil on canvas, 120 x 140&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''Houses by the River'' (after 1898)
(Oil on canvas, 40,5 x 61&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''Waterside House''
(Oil on canvas, 72,5 x 100&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Old Man'' (1896–97)
(Oil on canvas, 100 x 70,5&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''Tramp Seated on a Bench'' (c. 1898)
(Oil on canvas, 70 x 100&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Man Seated Wearing Hat''
(Oil on canvas, 34 x 26&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''After the Brawl'' (c. 1898)
(Oil on canvas, 85 x 65&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''In the Tavern'' (after 1898)
(Oil on canvas, 162 x 130&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''Landscape in the Alps (View from the Rax)'' (c. 1900)
(Oil on canvas, 28,3 x 34,5&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Tramp with Cigar'' (c. 1900)
(Oil on canvas, 28,5 x 23&nbsp;cm, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest)
*''Head of a Tramp with Light Hat'' (c. 1900)
(Oil on cardboard, 36,5 x 28&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
*''Winter'' (1906)
(Oil on wood, 25 x 30,5&nbsp;cm, Private collection)
{{Expand section|date=June 2008}}
 
===Gallery===
<gallery>
image:László Mednyánszky (1852-1919) Fishing on the Tisza.jpg| Fishing on the [[Tisza]] (1852-1919)
image:László Mednyánszky Hildside at Springtime (Little Landscape)1903-04.jpg| Hildside in Springtime (1903-04)
image:At the Iron Gate.jpg| Iron Gate on the Danube (1890-95)
image:Mednyánszky, László - Landscape at Autumn (ca 1890).jpg|Landscape in Autumn (ca 1890)
image:László Mednyánszky Old Tramp 1880.jpg| Old Tramp (c.1880)
image:László Mednyánszky Soldiers1914-1918.jpg| Soldiers (c.1914-18)
image:László Mednyánszky Prisoners Marching Off 1914-18.jpg| Prisoners Marching Off 1914-18 (1914-18)
image:László Mednyánszky (1852-1919) Watering.jpg| Watering (1852-1919)
</gallery>
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
==External links==
{{Commons category|László Mednyánszky}}
*[http://www.webumenia.sk/web/guest/home/-/simpleSearch/au/Mednyanszky Works held in Slovak art collections]
*[http://www.hung-art.hu/frames-e.html?/english/m/mednyans/index.html Fine Arts in Hungary: Works by László Mednyánszky]
*[http://www.sng.sk/?loc=3&id=5&nid=11&lang=1 SNG online<!-- bot-generated title -->] at www.sng.sk - Slovakian National Gallery Online: Ladislav Mednyánszky and Strážky
{{European painters}}
 
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME =Mednyanszky
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH =1852-04-23
| PLACE OF BIRTH =Beckó, [[Kingdom of Hungary]] (today [[Slovakia]])
| DATE OF DEATH =1919-04-17
| PLACE OF DEATH =[[Vienna]], [[Austria]]
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mednyanszky}}
[[Category:1852 births]]
[[Category:1919 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Nové Mesto nad Váhom District]]
[[Category:Hungarian painters]]
[[Category:Academy of Fine Arts, Munich alumni]]
[[Category:Burials at Kerepesi Cemetery]]
 
{{portale|Pittura|Biografie}}
[[be:Ласла Меднянскі]]
[[en:László Mednyánszky]]
[[eo:László Mednyánszky]]
[[es:László Mednyánszky]]
[[eo:László Mednyánszky]]
[[fr:László Mednyánszky]]
[[it:László Mednyánszky]]
[[hu:Mednyánszky László (festő)]]
[[pl:Ladislav Medňanský]]