Artist

Eugene Kormendi

born Budapest, Austria-Hungary 1889-died Washington, DC 1959
Media - kormendi_eugene.jpg - 90049
Copyright unknown
Also known as
  • Jeno Kormendi
Born
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
Died
Washington, District of Columbia, United States
Active in
  • South Bend, Indiana, United States
Biography

Eugene Kormendi studied at the Academy of Budapest, then traveled to Paris to work with Auguste Rodin and Jean Paul Lorenz. In 1939 he visited America for the New York World’s Fair with his wife, Elizabeth, a painter and ceramist. During their tour, World War II broke out in eastern Europe and they were unable to return home. Eugene found a position as sculptor-in-residence at Notre Dame University that allowed them to stay in the United States. He created many statues while at the university, including a war memorial in Valparaiso, Indiana, and a twenty-two foot-statue depicting Christ as the “Light of the World” for the National Catholic Welfare Conference in Washington D.C.

Works by this artist (4 items)

Lucile Blanch, Lake George, 1929, lithograph on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Michael J. Ettner, 2021.88.15
Lake George
Date1929
lithograph on paper
Not on view
Lucile Blanch, The Glutton, ca.1940, color monotype on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Michael J. Ettner, 2021.88.14
The Glutton
Dateca.1940
color monotype on paper
Not on view
Untitled
Dateca.1920
conte crayon and charcoal on paper
Not on view