Ván Hajnalka (szerk.): Bepillantás a kintbe. Kolozsváry-Stupler Éva művészete - Munkácsy Mihály Múzeum Közleményei 9. (Békéscsaba, 2017)
A művészről és a szerzőkről
About the artist and the authors 79 Eva Kolosvary-Stupler fine artist, born in Budapest, 1937 Studies: Secondary Grammar Schoo! of Fine and Applied Arts majoring in drawing and painting, 1955; Kunstgewerbe Schule, Zurich 1958-1959; El Camino, Junior College, Los Angeles, painting, ceramics and applied graphics 1965-1969; California State University Long Beach, graphics, BA, MA, MFA degrees 1972-1980. She is a retired lecturer. Significant exhibitions: Flungary: Flomage to my Homeland, the 2nd exhibition of Hungarian artists living abroad, Műcsarnok, Budapest, 1983; Permanent exhibition, Collection of Jankay-Kolozsváry-Tevan, Munkácsy Mihály Museum, Békéscsaba, 2013 United States of America: Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, 1975; Harbor College, Los Angeles, 1975, 1989; Heritage Gallery, Los Angeles, 1976, 1978; Davidson Gallery, Seattle, 1977, 1980; Palos Verdes Art Center, Rancho Palos Verdes, 1990; Don O’Melveny Gallery, West Hollywood, 2002, 2004; Mt. San Antonio College Art Gallery, Walnut, 2007; Torrance Art Museum, Torrance, 2009 She has participated in more than a hundred collective exhibitions in different states of the country, and she has displayed her etchings in selected exhibitions of the Smithsonian Institute, in different universities and museums of the country. She has received numerous acknowledgements and prizes. Her works can be found in many well-known museums’ collections all over the world, in Hungary they can be found in the Munkácsy Mihály Museum, Békéscsaba. Gábor Bellák art historian, a colleague of the Hungarian National Gallery since 1983. He organized several exhibitions both in Hungary and abroad. He has written books on Gyula Benczúr, Csontváry, and on the Hungarian art in the 19th century. As a professional dealing with art in the 19th and 20th centuries, he was charged by the town of Békéscsaba in 1995 to survey the artistic bequests of Tibor Jankay in Los Angeles. He got acquainted with Eva Kolosvary there. His book on Jankay was published in Békéscsaba in 2003. Harvey Stupler has an M.A. in Far Eastern Art and Archaeology from Columbia University and an M.A. in Chinese Art and Archaeology from Princeton University. He has taught for the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., California State University, Long Beach, and the University of California, Irvine. He was Assistant Professor of Art History for fourteen years at Long Beach City College until his retirement in 2003. Hajnalka Ván art historian, curator of the Jankay bequest since 2006 and of the donations from Kolosvary and Tevan families. At first, she worked as a museologist in Jankay Collection and Contemporary Gallery, and since 2013 she has been the museologist of Munkácsy Mihály Museum. She writes studies and organizes exhibitions of works of creators and contemporary artists living in or related to Békéscsaba.