Ulrich Moroder (born 4 October 1948 in Ortisei in Val Gardena) is an Italian artist from South Tyrol.
In 1974 Moroder received training at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna (O. Oberhuber, A. Frohner). [1] In 1976 he went to Provence. In 1978 he attended the Academie de la Grande Chaumiere in Paris. From 1980 to 1987 he had several study visits to New York and Los Angeles and from 1988 to 1993 in Rome. He is a brother of Giorgio Moroder. Ulrich worked during his vocational apprenticeship and trained as a barrel painter in Ortisei. Moroder played ice hockey from 1968 to 1969 for the team HC Gherdëina, participating and winning the Serie A tournament. [2] He currently lives and works in Vienna and Ortisei.
Moroder has had exhibitions in Austria, Italy, Germany, the United States and France. The artist also used to be part of the South Tyrolean Artists Association. [3] Some works of the artist have been sold to the City of Vienna, the Federal Ministry for Education and Cultural Affairs, the Museion Bozen, [4] and to the Ferdinandeum in Innsbruck. [5]
Val Gardena is a valley in the Dolomites of South Tyrol, Northern Italy. It is best known as a tourist skiing, rock climbing, and woodcarving area.
Hockey Club Gherdëina, also known as HC Gardena, currently named HC Gherdeina valgardena.it due to sponsorship reasons, is an Italian ice hockey team, which plays in the Alps Hockey League, having formerly played in the top division of Italian ice hockey, the Serie A. Originally based in Urtijëi, since 1999 they play their home games at the Pranives Ice Stadium, located in Sëlva, South Tyrol.
Urtijëi is a town of 4,637 inhabitants in South Tyrol in northern Italy. It occupies the Val Gardena within the Dolomites, a mountain chain that is part of the Alps.
David Moroder was an Italian luger and sculptor.
Gardena may refer to one of the following
Moroder is a germanised version of the Ladin surname Mureda.
Josef Theodor Moroder, also known as the Lusenberger, was a painter and sculptor, the most prominent artist of the Moroder family from the Grödenthal in South Tyrol.
The Gherdëina Local Heritage Museum was opened in the Cësa di Ladins in Urtijëi, in northernmost Italy, in 1960. The building is the seat of the Union di Ladins de Gherdëina a cultural organisation for the keeping of the Ladin language and heritage in Val Gherdëina. In addition to the museum, the building hosts a library specialized in Ladin language and culture.
Lech dl Dragon is a proglacial lake in the Dolomites of South Tyrol, Italy. The lake is located on a ledge on the north side of the Sella Group. It is created periodically from the melting of a glacier that is hidden beneath the scree from the rock towers, above.
Rudolf Moroder-Lenèrt was an Austrian sculptor specializing in religious art, who was a member of the Moroder family of South Tyrol, which was notable for the many artists of repute they produced.
Franz Tavella was a Ladin master wood sculptor active in the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the Kingdom of Italy.
Johann Baptist Moroder was an Austrian sculptor. He mainly focused on sculptures of bigger sizes representing Christian sacred figures; nowadays his works are mainly spread in the Italian region of Alto Adige.
Ludwig Moroder "Lenert" was an Italian sculptor and teacher. He was also known as:Ludwig Moroder dl Meune or Lodovico Moroder.
Franz Moroder Lenèrt was an Austrian politician and poet. He was the first mayor of Urtijëi in Val Gardena, a merchant, a scholar of Ladin history as well as a strong promoter of the Ladinian language.
Adele Moroder-Lenèrt was an Austrian author who spent a considerable part of her life in Italy. She exclusively wrote in Ladin.
Alex Moroder was an Italian activist.
Friedrich Moroder, also known as Rico was a South Tyrolean sculptor.
Albin Moroder was an Austrian sculptor.
Johann Baptist Walpoth was an Austrian sculptor.
Walter Moroder is a contemporary South Tyrolean sculptor and draftsman.