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As a master of realism, Jerome Witkin illustrates in his art the moral plight of everyday lives. His most complex and critically acclaimed works - intense, often disturbing scenes of the Holocaust - have earned him a growing international audience.
Through the "virtues of descriptive vividness and accuracy," as Kenneth Baker writes in his Foreword, Sherry Chayat elucidates Witkin's success in almost single-handedly returning to the realm of painting those subjects that are powerfully universal as well as intensely personal. Witkin believes that this is his domain as a painter, as it was for artists like Goya and Eakins.
Mortal Sin: In the Confession of J. Robert Oppenheimer; Death as an Usher: Berlin, 1933; Subway: A Marriage; The Screams of Kitty Genovese - Witkin's huge and often multipaneled canvases deal with human dilemmas and current societal issues, such as the homeless, AIDS, and drugs. His art demonstrates that we bear a moral responsibility for the pain suffered by others. "I'm not just a painter," Witkin states. "I'm a person looking at my century.
We must get back to someplace where we can feel again, where we have value, a sense of the future."
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Previews available in: English
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1
Life Lessons: The Art of Jerome Witkin
January 30, 2006, Syracuse University Press
Paperback
in English
- 2 edition
0815608179 9780815608172
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2
Life Lessons: The Art of Jerome Witkin
January 30, 2006, Syracuse University Press
Hardcover
in English
- 2 edition
0815608462 9780815608462
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3
Life lessons: the art of Jerome Witkin
2005, Syracuse University Press
in English
- 2nd ed.
0815608462 9780815608462
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zzzz
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4
Life lessons: the art of Jerome Witkin
1994, Syracuse University Press
in English
- 1st ed.
0815626177 9780815626176
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