NEW YORK, NY.- The year 2016 marks the 40th anniversary of the
Ukrainian Museum, and an exhibition of the works of Jacques Hnizdovsky (1915-1985) is especially appropriate for the Museum's year-long celebration. Hnizdovsky embodies the ethos of post-World War II Ukrainian artists of the diaspora. He ranks among that generation's most distinguished and accomplished figures. And he designed the Museums logo for its debut in 1976. Jacques Hnizdovsky: Content and Style. Evolving Perspectives is comprised of more than 100 works by Hnizdovsky, including oils, woodcuts, linocuts, ceramics, sculptures, drawings, and more. The exhibition opened to the public on March 13; it will be on display through August 7, 2016.
From the essay by guest curator Jaroslaw Leshko:
Hnizdovskys prodigious oeuvre, dominated by paintings and prints, places him in a long, distinguished tradition of painters-printmakers from Albrecht Dürer, whose woodcuts were Hnizdovskys earliest inspiration, to the present.
The singularity of Hnizdovskys vision of the world is at once direct, accessible and eloquent. It was forged by the Art Academies of Warsaw and Zagreb, the immigrant communities near Munich, the powerful force of modernism confronted in New York, moments of crisis, perseverance and ultimate triumph.
Among the themes Hnizdovsky explores in his paintings are his experiences of the aftermath of World War II in DP camps and the beauty and drama of cities where he lived. In his landscapes he explores natures variability and beauty and his still lifes celebrate earths bounty. The artists religious works, powerful and expressive, probe issues of betrayal, suffering, and redemption.
Hnizdovskys most mature and accomplished works are his woodcuts on which he concentrated in earnest since 1960, and whose major subject is natures flora and fauna. Stylization, a word often used as shorthand to define Hnizdovskys unique visual language does not fully convey the artists transformative iteration of the natural world. His plants and creatures are taken from nature, but are not of it.
The importance of Hnizdovskys achievements was recognized by Peter A. Wick, curator of the Department of Printing and Graphic Arts of the Houghton Library at Harvard University, when he wrote in 1976: The woodcuts of Jacques Hnizdovsky represent some of the richest and most original printmaking in American Graphic Arts of the past thirty years.
Hnizdovsky has been the recipient of many prestigious awards, among them the Tiffany, the MacDowell Colony, and the Ossabaw Foundation fellowships. His work is in many important private and public collections, which include the Cleveland Art Museum of Fine Arts, the Davison Art Center of Wesleyan University, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Philadelphia Museum, the White House and Yale University.
Jacques Hnizdovsky: Content and Style. Evolving Perspectives is drawn from the Museums extensive collection of his works, a large portion of which was generously donated by Stephanie Fanny Hnizdovsky, the artists wife, and Mira Hnizdovsky, their daughter. Other gifts of major works by the artist are from the collections of Ostap and Ursula Balaban and Dr. Andrew and Tatiana Tershakovec. The exhibition is further augmented by generous loans from members and friends of the Museum. The Museum is especially grateful to the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art in Chicago for an important loan of Hnizdovskys paintings and prints to the exhibition.
Jacques Hnizdovsky (1915-1985) was born in the village of Pylypche, Borshchiv region, Ukraine. Hnizdovsky began his art studies in 1938 when he entered the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts to study painting. The outbreak of World War II interrupted his studies, and he later completed his studies at the Academy of Arts and Crafts in Zagreb, Croatia where he remained until 1944. That year, he began a major canvas, The Art Academy, which he completed in 1950. After leaving Zagreb, Hnizdovsky reconnected with the Ukrainian diaspora community in displaced persons (DP) camps near Munich where he stayed till his departure for America in 1949. Hnizdovskys masterpiece of the European phase of his career is the painting Displaced Persons (1948), which is on display in this exhibition.
Hnizdovsky arrived in America in 1949, settling in St. Paul, Minnesota, where he entered and won second prize in two juried shows, one for his graphic work, the other for painting which persuaded him to become a full-time artist and move to New York City. The cities that he chose to paint are mainly New York, which he came in 1950 and settled, and Paris, where he resided temporarily from 1956 to 1958.