Ferdynand Feldman „Girl”
Description
Pastels on cardboard, signed and dated lower left „Feldman 1918”.
Framed: 76x60 cm (59x43 cm)
Ferdynand Feldman (1862-1919) was a theater actor known from Polish scenes at the turn of the 19th and 20th century. Feldman studied at the Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, after at the Derynga drama school in Warsaw. From 1881, he appeared in the Krakow theater, playing first the role of footmen. Due to his hort and stock posture , he was initially successful in comedies, farces and operettas. Feldman played in garden theaters, in Warsaw, Krakow, Poznań, Lublin, Częstochowa and Łódź. In 1890 he was involved in the ensemble of the Grand Theater in Lviv, where he performed for twenty-five years. In the years 1916-19 he worked in the Juliusz Słowacki Theatre in Krakow. The attention of the critics was caught by his creations in the works of Aleksander Fredro (he played Benet, Chamberlain, Geldhab and Radost). Feldman often played the character of Napoleon Bonaparte and Tadeusz Pawlikowski, however, started casting the actor in dramatic roles, which allowed Feldman to develop his talent. His biggest roles are Bos in Hope and Bezsiemionow in Mieszczanach. The actor was characterized by a great diction, using gestures and facial expressions, he significantly differentiated his characters, built a character using small details and props. Ferdynand Feldman was a Polish Jew, and before his marriage to opera singer Katarzyna Sawicka at Saint Nicholas Church in Lviv, he accepted the Catholic baptism and converted to Roman Catholicism. He was also father of actress Krystyna Feldman.