Ivan Vavpotič’s paintings are known for being polished and gallery-ready, and flush with the romantically sensitive realism that he learned in Paris. His guiding principle was that both the viewer’s eye and soul had to find respite when observing a painting. He considered beauty a value that elevates you from the mundane, overwhelming your emotions and soothing you, just like music. Music was no stranger to Vavpotič, as he played the piano and in Prague at first matriculated at the conservatory.
Fran Gerbič (1840‒1917) was a composer whose prodigious output numbered over 600 works. He was also an opera singer, a tenor, who sang at the National Theaters in Prague and Lviv, and as primo uomo at the Opera in Zagreb. Illness forced him to quit singing and thus he became a teacher at the school Glasbena Matica, leading the musical productions of the Dramatic Society and the choir of the National Reading Room, as well as helping found a professional Slovenian theater (1892), where he conducted operatic productions.
Vavpotič approached his portraits by diving deep into the subject’s psyche, meticulously planning the composition, and harmoniously structuring the color hues and use of illumination. This painting was produced in 1911 after the artist moved from Idrija to Ljubljana in 1910, where he was forced to take on all sorts of work to pay the bills, occupying himself a great deal with portraits.