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Known for using blood and animal carcasses in his art, Hermann Nitsch has died

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The Austrian painter and action artist Hermann Nitsch stands in front of one of his blue works at his studio at Prinzendorf Castle. He will turn 80 on 29 August 2018. Photo: David Visnjic/dpa (Photo by David Visnjic/picture alliance via Getty Images)
The Austrian painter and action artist Hermann Nitsch stands in front of one of his blue works at his studio at Prinzendorf Castle. He will turn 80 on 29 August 2018. Photo: David Visnjic/dpa (Photo by David Visnjic/picture alliance via Getty Images)
  • Hermann Nitsch is famous for his paintings and performances using animal blood and carcasses.
  • He died at age 83 at a hospital in Lower Austria province on Monday.
  • Nitsch has two museums devoted to his work in Austria and one in Italy.

Austrian artist Hermann Nitsch, famous for his paintings and performances using animal blood and carcasses, died at age 83, his family said Tuesday.

Nitsch died at a hospital in Lower Austria province on Monday. His niece told AFP.

"Hermann Nitsch died peacefully at the age of 83 after a serious illness," a statement from the family said.

Nitsch was part of the Actionists, a radical 1960s avant-garde movement known for skinning animal carcasses, tying up human bodies, and using blood, mud, and urine in their works.

"Austria mourns the loss of a fascinating painter and an impressive person," Austrian president Alexander Van der Bellen posted on Twitter, adding Nitsch "redefined" the country's art scene.

The Austrian enfant terrible was best known for his long-running Orgies Mysteries Theatre, a performance-based show representing slaughters and religious sacrifices.

"In my conceptions of being, there is everything, life, death, illness, pain, aggression. Through my work, I want to show all of this," Nitsch said in 2011 in response to criticism that dogged him.

Nitsch's more recent shows included an exhibition in Sicily, Italy, in 2015, which featured dead animals on crucifixes, and led animal rights groups to accuse him of blasphemy and inciting violence.

His wife Rita Nitsch told AFP "that this kind of small ruckus is always part of (his work)... But quality has triumphed over the polemic."

Nitsch has two museums devoted to his work in Austria and one in Italy. 

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