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Graphic Force, Humanist Vision - Leonard Baskin |
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Leonard Baskin, Pleading Warrior, 1961. © Estate of Leonard Baskin.
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PORTLAND, OR.- The Portland Museum of Art will present Graphic Force, Humanist Vision - Leonard Baskin Works on Paper, on view August 18 November 11, 2007. An internationally acclaimed sculptor, printmaker, painter, calligrapher, essayist, book designer, and poet, Leonard Baskin (American, 1922-2000) was a major figure in 20th-century American art. In the 1940s and 1950s when movements such as abstract expressionism all but eliminated the human form in painting and sculpture, Baskin championed it. Through figuration, his overarching concern was to express the power and depth of the human condition at its most primal. This exhibition of some 50 prints, drawings, and artist books, selected chiefly from the Museums holdings and northwest private collections, highlights images of humanity as a central theme in Baskins works on paper. Graphic Force, Humanist Vision reveals both the brilliance of his skill and the immediate poignancy of Baskins artistic legacy: the common consciousness of humankind.
Born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1922, Baskin grew up in Brooklyn under the strict tutelage of his rabbi father, which gave him a rich classical education. After studying with sculptor Maurice Glickman, and attending several universities, Baskin taught himself the art of printmaking at Yale University, which he attended on a scholarship. There, in 1942, he founded the Gehenna Press, a private fine art press that published more than 100 handcrafted artist books and portfolios during his lifetime. Primarily known as a sculptor, Baskin rapidly gained international recognition as a printmaker and book designer. A heroic series of monumental woodcuts in the 1950s, which includes the Museums Man of Peace (1952) and the chilling Hydrogen Man (1954) included in the exhibition, brought him controversy and notoriety as a biting social critic and brilliant woodcut artist.
Marnie P. Stark, Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings and curator for the exhibition, noted, In an age where the image of man is often a glossed semblance for popular consumption, Baskins work sings the flesh back on to the bones of our humanity through an artistic vision of wrenching honesty and tremendous power.
The late Dr. Francis J. Newton, who as executive director and curator, organized a series of Baskin exhibitions in 1963 and 1964 at the Portland Art Museum. He gifted the majority of the Museums Baskin holdings.
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