
Jan Matejko
1838–1893 · Free City of Kraków · History painting, Romanticism, 19th-century realism
The story
Jan Matejko was born in 1838 in Kraków, in a Poland that did not exist on the map. The country had been split three ways by Russia, Prussia, and Austria six decades earlier, and by the time Matejko was painting, most of his countrymen had never lived under a Polish government. He answered that erasure with size. His paintings of Polish history run to enormous scale, the Battle of Grunwald from 1878 stretches nearly 10 meters wide, crowded with named kings, knights, and banners from a 1410 victory over the Teutonic Knights that Poles could still take pride in even with no state of their own.
Matejko compressed decades into a single canvas, invented meetings that never took place, and dressed his figures for dramatic effect rather than documented costume, choices later historians have criticized. Even so, the paintings were reproduced constantly as prints and postcards, hung in homes across the partitioned Polish lands, doing work that a national museum or a national government could not do at the time.
He taught at Kraków's School of Fine Arts for the last two decades of his life, training the next generation of Polish painters, and died in 1893, buried in the same city where the enormous Grunwald canvas had drawn crowds fifteen years earlier.
Works
15 works
Battle of GrunwaldJan Matejko, 1878
StańczykJan Matejko, 1862
Constitution of May 3, 1791Jan Matejko, 1891
Astronomer Copernicus, or Conversations with GodJan Matejko, 1873
Prussian HomageJan Matejko, 1879
RejtanJan Matejko, 1866
Skarga's SermonJan Matejko, 1864
The Hanging of the Sigismund bell at the Cathedral Tower in 1521 in KrakówJan Matejko, 1874
Stephen Báthory at PskovJan Matejko, 1872
Poland – The Year 1863Jan Matejko, 1864
Battle of RaclawiceJan Matejko, 1888
The Baptism of LithuaniaJan Matejko, 1888
Union of LublinJan Matejko, 1869
Bohdan Khmelnytsky with Tugay Bey near Lviv.Jan Matejko, 1885
Jan Sobieski at ViennaJan Matejko, 1883