Jutta sika biography of abraham
Jutta Sika
Austrian artist
Jutta Sika (17 September – 2 January ) was an Austrian graphic designer, artist, fashion designer, and an educator.
Early life and education
Sika was born on 17 September in Linz, Austria. Her father, Alfred Sika, had worked as an inspector for the state-controlled railway system.
Around the same year that she was born, the family moved to Vienna.
Jutta sika biography of abraham In the s, she taught design and fashion illustration at the Federal School for Female Industries in Salzburg. On paper, his imagination and passion for staging and arranging had no limit. The first financier and co-founder Fritz Waerndorfer was no longer able to compensate the losses after contributing for 11 years and left the company in If a design or object was accepted by the WW, the artist was able to write an invoice.Sika had always had an interest in the arts and in , she began to pursue her studies at the Graphische Lehr- und Versuchsanstalt in Vienna.[1] She remained there for two years before continuing her education at the School of Applied Arts, where she went to study costume design from to and then returning from to [2]
Career
Sika was one of the founding members of "Wiener Kunst im Hause", a group formed in that was composed of former students who had attended Kunstgewerbeschule Wien.
This group then rebranded itself as Wiener Werkstätte, shifting their attention towards creating Gesamtkunstwerk, a unified system that embraced the concept of a total work of art and all around a unified design for interiors. Sika was also a skilled ceramicist[3] and glass designer working for well-known ceramics and glass manufacturers.
Later she went on to design women's fashion for multiple fashion firms, creating accessories and embroidery designs for Austrian fashion brands such as Schwestern Flöge and Wiener Stickerei.
Biography of isaac Primavesi ran the enterprise until when, he too, encountered financial problems. She died on 2 January in Vienna. In: Wiener Bilder Camilla Birke l.She then worked as a graphic designer, working for a Christmas tree decoration firm, tea packaging and making postcards. In , she began to put all of her energy towards paintings when she developed an interest in creating floral subjects. She also worked as a teacher, becoming a professor for a drawing class at Gewerbliche Fortbildungschule in Vienna from to During the Second World War she spent the remainder of her time teaching at an girls' secondary school.[4]
She died on 2 January in Vienna.[2]
Work
Many of Sika's works are in the collections of museums in the United States including the Museum of Modern Art,[5] the Art Institute of Chicago,[6] and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[7]