Johann Fischer
1919–2008, Austrian
Tags: Drawing, Painting
Johann Fischer was born in Kirchberg am Wagram, Austria. He grew up on a small farm with six siblings and trained as a baker. In 1940, following the outbreak of World War II, he was drafted into the German army and was later captured by American forces. He returned home in 1946 and worked on his parents’ farm, taking it over when his father retired. In 1957 he received treatment for hallucinations. He was institutionalized in the hospital in Maria Gugging, an area within the town of Klosterneuburg, outside Vienna, in 1961.
Fischer began a routine drawing practice, with the encouragement of psychiatrist Leo Navratil, at the age of sixty-three. Recognizing the talent of his patients, Navratil founded a residential community of psychiatric patients with serious artistic practices called the House of Artists. It opened in 1981 on a hilltop in Maria Gugging. The small building accommodates about nine residents. Fischer moved into the House of Artists in 1982.
Working from his imagination, Fischer portrayed humans, animals, farm life, and political events in pen and crayon in his early drawings. His later works often incorporate neatly lettered satirical and humorous texts. His works have been included in many group exhibitions, such as ABCD: A Collection of Art Brut at the Museum of American Folk Art in New York in 2001.