medium:"Color engraving, soft-ground etching, and scorper"
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Perseus Beheading Medusa VIII
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%C2%A9 Estate Andr%C3%A9 Racz
Color engraving, soft-ground etching, and scorperexpand_more
Gift of funds from the Print and Drawing Councilexpand_more P.99.12.1
André Racz joined the wave of artists who immigrated to America from Europe after the outbreak of World War II in 1939. A painter, sculptor, printmaker, and educator, Racz was active at Stanley Hayter's renowned experimental print workshop Atelier 17 in New York between 1943 and 1945.
Among the prints he produced there is this dramatic interpretation of the well-known mythic Greek hero-warrior Perseus, who victoriously holds the severed head of the slain Gorgon monster Medusa, whose powers include the ability to turn to stone those who dare look in her eyes. Perseus's story is a long and convoluted adventure. The son of Zeus and Danäe, Perseus embarked on a perilous journey to find and kill Medusa as a wedding gift for Polydectes, King of Serifos Island, who had pledged marriage to Danäe. Unbeknownst to Perseus, his mother had rejected the king's advances. On learning of the deception, Perseus holds the severed head of Medusa before the king and his court, turning all of them to stone.
Racz's composition was strongly influenced both by Hayter's distinct brand of abstract surrealism and Picasso's anguished and tormented images of mythical subjects.