1881-1962
Austrian/Hungarian
Luigi Kasimir was an Austro-Hungarian printmaker, etcher, and painter born in a town known today as Ptuj, Slovenia. He was raised in a family of accomplished artists, both his father and grandfather being notable painters in their day. Kasimir studied at the Vienna Academy of Art under William Unger, where he discovered the art of etching and met his future wife and creative partner Johanna (Tanna) Hoernes (1887-1987). Soon after, he used this acquired knowledge and his love of painting to develop a unique style of printmaking known as the multiple plate color etching process -hence changing the future of etching and printmaking as a whole at the turn of the 20th century. While Kasimir is justly famous for his etchings, he also produced oils and pastels. His work depicted landscapes, monuments, street scenes, and tourist landmarks throughout Europe and North America. His son Robert Kasimir (1904-2002) was also an etcher and a painter; in 1961, he opened his own print shop in Vienna, where he printed his own etchings, together with those made by his parents.