In the summer of 1899, he visited Simon Hollósy's free school in Nagybánya artists' colony, and in the same year he exhibited charcoal drawings in the Hungarian National Salon.
He was a student of Bertalan Székely at the Model Drawing School (today: Hungarian University of Fine Arts) in 1899–1900.
In 1911 he presented his works in Nagyvára and in 1912 in Szeged, and in 1915 he appeared at the Military and Public Health Exhibition with his charcoal drawings of soldiers lying in hospitals.
In his entire work, these portraits are his most finished creations, because in them the will, the intention, the instinct have united into reality in the most complete harmony.
"[4] During the decade spent in Nagyszőlős, he studied the life of Transcarpathian Jews, drawing and painting their traditions and lives.
He was forced to experience the siege of the capital in the Budapest ghetto, where he died shortly after its liberation.