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He returned to Hungary in 1724 to settle down. Although he had orders from aristocratic families to paint portraits, he did not earn enough to live on painting. From 1732 he worked in Berlin and Leipzig, and then in Dresden until his death.
He was a great talent of Baroque portrait painters. His major works: "Self-Portrait", "Portraits of Ferenc Rákóczi II" in Hungary (1708) and Danzig (1712), "The Portrait of Mrs Bercsényi" (1712), "The Duke of Flemming" (1713) and "An Unknown Hungarian Aristocrat", portraits of the prince of Anhalt's family and mistresses ("The Duchess of Montmororency", 1714, "The Countess of Cosel", 1715, and "The Countess of Dörrhoff", 1713, 1716). In the Hapsburg court, he painted portraits of Karl VI, the child Marie Therese and Marie Anne (1723). His visits to Hungary produced the portraits of the Ráday, Podmaneczky, etc. families, complying with the provincial style in portrait painting. Significant works of his last perio "Rechberg, Professor of Law", "Blendinger, Goldsmith", "W.G. Knebelsdorff" (1732), "The Sulkowski Children" (1734), "A Boy in Fancy Dress" and "A Girl". The most mature and individual picture of this periods is "The Portrait of A. Thiele, Painter" (1737),