Deutsch
Carry Hauser studied at the Graphic Arts Training and Research Institute and at the Vienna School of Applied Arts. In 1914 he volunteered for military service, but returned to Vienna as a pacifist. He then lived mainly in Vienna, but also sporadically in Passau, where he was friends with the painter Georg Philipp Wörlen. However, many works from this early creative period, evidence of the horrors of war, were lost in the turbulence of the post-war period. From 1928 he was president of the Hagenbund. In the corporate state, he was involved in the Fatherland Front before the National Socialists banned him from working and exhibiting. In 1939 Hauser left Austria to follow an appointment at an art school in Melbourne. However, the outbreak of war prevented him from leaving for Australia and forced him to stay in Switzerland, where employment restrictions were imposed on him. For this reason he was mainly active in literature during that time. After his return to Vienna in 1947, Hauser took part in building cultural life in Austria. He became general secretary of the P.E.N. Club and honorary president of the New Hagenbund. As a painter he enjoyed an international reputation in the post-war period. He made a name for himself as a journalist with articles about art and art issues. His achievements were recognized through public commissions and awards, including the Golden Medal of the City of Vienna, as well as the award of the title of professor.
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