black and white; man and woman face one another on R; man with crown- like headdress on L; wood frame

%C2%A9 Estate Mauricio Lasansky

For an Eye an Eye, III, 1946-1948

Not on Viewexpand_more

In forty years of teaching at the University of Iowa, Mauricio Lasansky played a major role in rejuvenating American interest in printmaking as a creative process. Shortly before Lasanksky's arrival in Iowa, he had his first encounter with Picasso's gigantic, ferocious painting Guernica. The experience gave him new impetus to express intense feeling in his art and to do with great immediacy. The series "For an Eye an Eye," an homage to Picasso, is one of the primary fruits of that change.

"For an Eye an Eye," a series of four prints, is Lasanky's first artistic reaction to the Holocaust. Though one cannot readily discern any simple, straightforward narrative in this nightmarish sequence, one has the sense of the inevitability and dehumanizing infectiousness of violence. One seemingly virtuous female figure, whose head is adorned with flowers, seems drawn into the monstrous thrall of violence.

Lasansky apparently made just one preparatory drawing for the series and then let his concept evolve as he worked directly on the plates. In a virtuoso display, he attacked the copper with etching, engraving, aquatint, burnishers and scrapers. Clearly, he changed his mind with some frequency, leaving knots of pentimenti that increase the energy and mystery of the images. The Holocaust would remain a recurrent theme in Lasanky's work, most famously in "The Nazi Drawings," a series of 33 monumental works produced in the 1960s.

Details
Title
For an Eye an Eye, III
Artist Life
American (born Argentina), 1914-2012
Role
Artist
Accession Number
2012.100.3
Provenance
The artist (until c. 1975; gave to his son Leonardo Lasansky, St. Paul); share given to Leonardo's son Amadeo Lasansky, New York, about 2010; given to MIA, 2012
Catalogue Raisonne
Zigrosser 69-72
Curator Approved

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black and white; man and woman face one another on R; man with crown- like headdress on L; wood frame

© Estate Mauricio Lasansky

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