Franz
Horst Strahalm
(1879-1935)
Dallas, Texas
Born Vienna, Austria. Strahalm inherited his talent from his father
who was an artist of Vienna, receiving his early training from him and later studied at
the Art School of Hamburg. His mother Wilhelmina Loria, from Copenhagen, Denmark, who died
in Mexico City in the 1920's, also encouraged him in his work.
Strahalm
moved to Mexico City in 1909 and then to Texas in 1911. Briefly in San Antonio and
Houston, then permanently in Dallas.
Strahalm
specialized in landscapes, painting many local scenes in Dallas. He also did figure,
portrait and mural work and used oil, water color and tempera and painted creditable
bluebonnet canvases. He exhibited successfully at the Royal Academy at Vienna; Paris
before coming to America in 1911; New York at the Anderson Gallery Exhibit: Independent
Artists Exhibit at the Waldorf-Astoria; also in Boston, Houston, San Antonio, Austin &
Dallas. He won two first prize awards and one second.
Strahalm was a member of the Society of Independent Artists; Art Center of New York;
Southern States Art League; and the Dallas Art Association.
He
received a single honor at the Sesquicentennial in Philadelphia, when he was invited to
send a specimen of his work for exhibition at the Exposition.
From a
sketching trip during the summer of 1926, Strahalm made a number of paintings of the
scenic beauty along the Colorado and Pecos Rivers. And in the summer of 1927 the artist
accompanied by his son, Wolfgang, made a sketching trip through the Western country, going
into New Mexico. He found this quaint and colorful country so attractive that he spent
many weeks at the Santa Fe Art Colony where he made numerous sketches of the Indian
villages at Santa Fe and at Taos. Soon later, many of his watercolors and oils were
exhibited at the Santa Fe Museum of Art.
Strahalm
was an artist of early importance in the twenties and thirties and is now being
rediscovered by Texas collectors.
Seeking to Purchase Works by
Franz Strahalm
& other Early Texas Artists


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Antonio,
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