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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 59 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2013
    Keywords: Künstler ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Ninety-three drawings and paintings will be installed, comprising Lurie's documentation and recollection of his experiences in concentration camps of Nazi Germany at the end of the war. Created from mid 1945 though late 1946, the work is a chronology of Boris's time there when he worked for the Allied occupying army and saw survivors living in Displaced Persons Camps that still resembled the likenesses of the former Nazis’ death camps. In 1945 Lurie was twenty-one years old and had no formal training in art, beyond the grade school level. Remarkably, he was able to create visually powerful depictions of prisoners marching out of enormous labor barns, Allied soldiers overseeing DP inmates and tending to management duties, survivors still dressed in stripped uniforms as they try to put themselves and their lives back together, as well as unnamed portraits and emaciated women, nude and sometimes with shaved heads. Throughout all of this work there is the presence of fierce raw talent. Lurieʼs violently strong, graphic line quality is confident and assured, with a tense nervous energy that reminds us of El Greco, who Boris admired. We also see, in nascent form, subjects Lurie will explore throughout his career: dancing figures, emotional figurative compositions, and nude women, an obsessive theme that will reemerge in his shocking work of the '50s and '60s. There is a grim look to this work that provides forceful visual credibility to the assessment of Earl G. Harrison, Truman's envoy to the DP camps, when he said: "We appear to be treating the Jews as the Nazis treated them, except that we don't exterminate them.”
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9781450766142
    Language: English
    Pages: 90 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2011
    Keywords: Maler ; Malerei ; Collage ; No! Art ; Ausstellung
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 134 Seiten, [1] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2017
    Abstract: Westwood Gallery NYC in collaboration with Boris Lurie Art Foundation presents an exhibition of paintings, collage and sculpture by Boris Lurie (1924-2008), co-founder of the NO!art movement. In 2010 the gallery exhibited Boris’ early work, the first solo exhibition after the artist’s death. The current exhibition comprises a curated selection by James Cavello of over 50 works of art from the 1950s to 1970s. Each decade of Boris Lurie’s life as an artist represented hard-hitting expression and a creative cathartic journey. After surviving the horrors of the holocaust, including four different concentration camps from 1941-45 as well as the murder of his mother, sister and grandmother, Boris and his father immigrated to New York City in 1946. The 22 year-old Boris immersed himself in his art and became a disruptor of norms. Boris’ early 1950s paintings on dark backgrounds are reminiscent of German Expressionism with disproportionate, sometimes deformed fading images of women. On exhibit are four large paintings with groupings of two and three women. The female image was symbolic of life, family, death, sexuality and objectification. Boris’ collages using pin-ups from ‘girlie’ magazines were startlingly incorporated into Holocaust photographs. The shock of the combination of images stemmed from Boris’ malevolence and art purge of crimes against humanity. As his frustration with the art world grew due to the focus on Abstract Expressionists and later Pop art, Boris co-founded the underground NO!art movement in 1959 with fellow artists Sam Goodman (1919-1967) and Stanley Fisher (1926-1980). In the exhibition are paintings and collage reflecting the anti-establishment attitude and Boris’ free form expression without commercial motivation. They encompass the artist’s views on politics, society, art, personal experiences and visceral expression. At the time, NO!art was largely rejected by art critics, museums and collectors, until the artists and artwork of NO!art became more understood in the historical context. Also included in the exhibition are a series of 1963 collages fixated on altered images of the establishment male in a tie with faces painted over and a grouping of 1970s assemblages of bras, corset and Israeli flag, symbolic of Boris’ intrinsic language. In 1970 Boris wrote a statement for an exhibition in Germany: “The time for Yes-art is not at all at hand. Who knows? Maybe NO!art’s time is yet to come.”
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 87 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2012
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