Adomas Varnas
Adomas Varnas was a prominent Lithuanian painter, photographer, collector, philanthropist, and educator.
Author of the world first album of ethnographical photography Lithuanian Crosses about the Lithuanian cross crafting.
He was husband of the educator Marija Kuraitytė-Varnienė and helped her promote the Montessori education in Lithuania.
Biography
Varnas was born in Joniškis, Lithuania. He studied art at St. Petersburg, Russia, and Kracow, Poland, where he was mostly impressed by the landscape artist Professor Stanislavski. He was in exile in Germany in 1902. In 1905 he went to study art at Geneva's Ecole des Beaux-Arts. At the same time, Varnas took two different art classes: portrait painting and decorative art. In 1908, after graduating from the academy of art, with highest degrees, he left for Sicily. The artist immersed himself into the Sicilian mountainous landscape with its scenic seashores and its fishermen, producing many landscape artworks.In 1913 Varnas returned to his native Lithuania, making his home in its capital Vilnius, where he worked not only as an artist but also as a civic and cultural leader. With the advancing of the war, in 1915 he went to Odessa, Russia. Charged with nationalist activities, he was arrested in 1917 and spent nearly a year in prison. After the war returned to Kaunas, where he opened his own studio.
After Lithuania won its independence in 1918, the artist Varnas worked in theatre and opera, making his contribution by painting the sceneries. He won many prizes by designing playing cards and postage stamps, and he went to Prague to supervise the first printing of Lithuanian money. As a teacher, he taught art at Lithuanian schools in Voronezh, and in Vilnius Vytautas the Great Gymnasium, Kaunas Art School, and State Art Institute. He spent five years collecting objects of Lithuanian folklore and making photographs of wooden crosses which were found alongside the roads.
During World War II, the artist Varnas fled Lithuania to Dresden, Germany. After spending time in a displaced persons camp, in 1949 he came to Chicago, where he lived until his death.