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ARTCAT



Boris Lurie: NO!art. An Exhibition of Early Work

Westwood Gallery
568 Broadway, Suite 501, 212-925-5700
Soho
June 4 - July 31, 2010
Web Site


Westwood Gallery, NYC in collaboration with Boris Lurie Art Foundation is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings, drawings, photomontage and sculpture by Boris Lurie (1924-2008), co-founder of the NO!art movement.

The exhibition includes 40 works of art which define early influences leading to Lurie’s expression against the celebrated consumerism of Pop and Abstract Expressionism. Accompanied by a catalogue, the exhibition comprises the first solo early retrospective of this fascinating artist since his death in 2008. NO!art began in 1959, co-founded by artists Sam Goodman (1919-1967) and Stanley Fisher (1926-1980).

The exhibition provides a view of Lurie’s artwork beginning in 1946. This was the year after surviving four years in several concentration camps, alongside his father—a simmering indication of the shocking artwork to come. Much of Lurie’s focus is on women, from charcoal drawings to dismembered female forms and distorted pin-ups incorporated into collages. His thought process is revealing considering his devastating memories of the murder of his grandmother, mother and sister during the Holocaust. Lurie moved to New York in 1946 where he was disenchanted by his view of ‘the hypocritical art scene’ and used his creativity to freely express political, social, psychological, personal, visceral and esoteric artwork. NO!art was largely rejected by art critics, museums and collectors, until the artists and artwork of NO!art became more understood and accepted in the art world. In the early post-war period, artwork by NO!art artists evoked negative reactions from viewers who were disturbed by the imagery or connotation they perceived. Whereas, Lurie and the NO!art artists were more concerned with freedom to express highly charged imagery. In 1970, Lurie 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.

Lurie’s artwork has been exhibited at Weimar-Buchenwald Memorial, Germany, Block Museum, Evanston, IL, Iowa Museum of Art, Iowa City, IA, and other museums and galleries in the U.S., Israel and Germany. Two film documentaries were completed on Boris Lurie, NO!art Man by Amikam Goldman, 2002, and Shoah and Pin-Ups: The NO!-Artist Boris Lurie, 2007. Both films explore the life and creation of the artist. A recent profile in ARTnews, April 2010, focuses on Mr. Lurie’s legacy and the Boris Lurie Art Foundation. The Boris Lurie Art Foundation is dedicated to preserving and exhibiting the artwork of Boris Lurie and the NO!art artists.

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