Alois Delug


Alois Delug was an Austrian painter and a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna. He may be remembered best for his supposed role in rejecting Adolf Hitler's application to join the Academy.

Life

After attending the Gymnasium in Bozen, Delug started painting, with encouragement from the painter Heinrich Schöpfer. He moved to Innsbruck and began studying history at the University of Innsbruck, staying until 1880, when he moved to Vienna and enrolled at the Academy, studying under the painter Leopold Carl Müller. In 1885, he began a three-year period of travelling, visiting England, Italy, France, Germany and Holland, then settled in Munich in 1888 and accepted orders for historical and religious paintings. In 1896, he moved back to Vienna, and became a founding member of the Vienna Secession, though he resigned from it in 1898. Delug joined the Academy as a professor in 1898, and became the director of the Allgemeine Malerschule. His students there included Karl Sterrer, Anton Velim, Hans Fronius, Anton Kolig, Hubert Lanzinger, Albert Stolz, Hans Popp and Franz Gruss. He visited America in 1923-24, and retired from teaching in 1928.
According to Josef Greiner, Delug denied Adolf Hitler a place at the Academy because of inadequate drawing ability. However, according to Brigitte Hamann, Delug was perennially at odds with the rest of the faculty, who did not share his Modernist and Secessionist tastes, and in 1907-08, he was not in Vienna after another falling-out. Therefore, the admission decision largely fell to the other director of the painting school, Christian Griepenkerl. Other historians have also discounted Greiner as a fraud.
He was buried in Grinzinger Cemetery in a gewidmet Grab. In 1931, a road in Döbling was named the Delugstraße in his honour. His painting The Markl Family was shown as part of , an exhibition at the National Gallery, London, from October 2013 to January 2014.

Selected works