Tom von Dreger


Tom von Dreger was an Austrian portrait, history, and genre painter.

Life and work

Tom von Dreger was born to Austro-Hungarian Colonel Gottfried Eugen Edler von Dreger and his wife, Mary née Greaves. He studied at the Academy of [Fine Arts Vienna] from 1884 to 1885 and again from 1887 to 1888, where he was taught by painters August Eisenmenger, Siegmund L'Allemand, and Heinrich von Angeli. Following his studies in Vienna, Dreger traveled to Venice, where he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts of Venice under Eugene de Blaas and Ludwig Passini. He then spent a year at the Munich Academy under the guidance of Alexander von Liezen-Mayer. In 1892, he moved to Paris and studied for seven years at the prestigious Académie Julian. During his time in Paris, he exhibited regularly at the Exhibition of the National Society of Fine Arts under the name T. R. de Dreger from 1893 to 1899.
In 1892, Dreger married Henriette Allesch, with whom he had five children, Martha, Marie, Gottfried, Ruth, and Lea.
After his time in Paris, Dreger lived in his residence in Neuschloss. In 1906, he permanently settled in Vienna, where he continued his artistic work. From Vienna, he went on numerous study trips to Transylvania, Germany, Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands, and the United States. In 1916, he created two altar paintings for the Votivkirche in Vienna and became the preferred portrait artist of the Austrian imperial family.
Throughout his career, Dreger produced many portraits of statesmen, clergy, and prominent figures from business, science, and the arts. Many of his works remain in private collections, though some are held in public institutions, including the painting collection of the Museum of Military History in Vienna and public buildings such as the Federal Ministry for Arts, Culture, the Civil Service and Sport, and the Historical Museum in Vienna.
Since 2014, Dreger’s honorary grave has been located at the Neustift Cemetery in Vienna.

Exhibitions

Selected works

Portraits

Religious paintings

Genre paintings

  • 1912 The Color Thief
  • 1912 Romanian Beggar
  • 1916 The Adoration
  • 1919 The Old Violinist
  • 1940 ''Vienna’s Hundred-Year-Old Washerwoman''

Writings

  • 1918 Painting Exhibition. Military Casino, Vienna.
  • 1946 How I Learned to See, Vienna, Holzhausen’s Successors.