Szilasi Ágota, H.: Víz - fény-szín-tér. Stílusvariációk egy technikára. Egri Országos Akvarell Biennálé 1968-2004 a Dobó István Vármúzeum kortárs akvarell gyűjteménye (Eger, 2006)

Valéria KONDOR (1975) Born in Pétervására, she currently lives in Baracska. She has been involved with the visual arts for ten years now, although the last five of those have been in the animation industry. She was taught by Borgó at the István Szőnyi School of Art. In Eger she studied in Péter Sarkad i 's studio, before coming under the influence of Péter Földi and István B. Nagy at Károly Eszterházy College. Although she is mainly interested in painting, she likes working with other materials. Single or pairs of monumental figures fill the surfaces of her paintings. She paints the kinds of animals, primarily birds, most likely to communicate human feelings, tragedies and states of mind. In her works one can find experimental compositional solutions, surface treatments and colour relationships. Prize winnerat the 1996 Eger Watercolour Biennial Judit KOPÓCSY (1947) Born in Debrecen, she is currently living in Budapest. Her teachers at the Hungarian College of Applied Arts were István Eigel and Károly Plesnivy. Having finished college she went into teaching, among other things. The various layers of her pictures reveal the metaphorical fragments of individual and collective stories from the distant past. Her works are small-scale and are of a meditative and personal nature. Her pictures depict balmy visions incorporating doors, tables, gates, windows, fragments of writing in which their transparent aspects are emphasised. She is particularly interested in the hidden, the mysterious, the forgotten, the lost, the imperceptible, in states which can be rendered in paint, but not expressed in words. Eger Watercolour Biennial award winner in 2000 and 2002 Beatrix KÓBOR (1976) Born in Sopron, she currently lives in Pécs. She studied under Sándor Pinczehelyi at the Arts Faculty of the University of Pécs. Her finely worked pencil and washes tend to focus on the analysis of a single motif. Frigyes KÖNIG (1955) Born in Székesfehérvár, he studied at the Hungarian College of Art between 1975 and 1982, and was a Derkovits bursary scholar between 1983 and 1985. He was awarded the Munkácsy prize in 1998, and currently teaches at the Hungarian College of Art. For many years he has been focusing on the relationship between shifting light and his chosen subject matter, something which is accompanied by a temporal dimension. The shifting light patterns forever change the appearance of the things he records in his drawings, paintings, photographs, reliefs, spatial objects and, more recently, computer graphics. His works combine realia and human figures placed in a quazi-archaic setting. He is the Hungarian representative for the Venice Biennial. Eger Watercolour Biennial award winner in 1986,1988 and 1996 Éva KRAJCSOVICS (1947) Born in Budapest, she is self-taught and continued her art studies at the Vasutas Képzőművészeti Kör (The Railway Workers' Arts Circle), where she was 116

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