Mauricio Lasansky

Mauricio Lasansky (1914-)
"My Wife"
Intaglio, ca. n.d.
LFAC #1997:08:14
Fine Arts Collection Lasansky works: 1
Biography
Mauricio Lasansky was born October 12, 1914 in Buenos Aires, Argnetina,
where his father worked as a banknote engraver. At the age of 19, Mauricio
began to study painting, sculpture and printmaking at the Escuela superior
de Bellas Artes (Buenos Aires). He came to the United States in 1943 on
a Guggenheim Fellowship and spent the year studying the print collection
at the Metropolitan Museum in New York. Renewal of the grant allowed him
to work at Stanley William Hayters Atelier 17 where he focused on
intaglio printing. In 1945 he was appointed lecturer in printmaking at
the University of Iowa (Iowa City), where he established the first Master
of Fine Arts printmaking program in the United States. In 1961 Time
magazine called the University of Iowa the "printmaking capital
of the U.S." and 40 years later the program Lasansky developed was
still recognized as the countrys number one printmaking department
(U.S. News & World Report.) His students went on to start their
own print departments at places such as UCLA, Tulane, Michigan State,
the Cleveland Institute of Art, and the universities of Texas, Minnesota,
Kansas, and Illinois. Several of his students are represented in the Luther
Fine Arts Collection, including Virginia Myers, John Page, Wanda Matthews,
William Ellingson, David Driesbach, Andrew Rush, Rupert Kilgore, and David
Kamm, to name only a few.
Lasansky has been the subject of over 160 one-man shows, including the
Palace of Fine Arts, Mexico City (1969), Whitney Museum of American Art,
New York (1971), Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA (1972 & 74), and
Third International Biennial Mexico (1980). His work is in the Chicago
Art Institute, Museum of Modern Art (NY), Library of Congress (Washington,
DC), Uffizi Gallery (Florence, Italy), Museum of Contemporary Art (Madrid,
Spain), and over 100 university and gallery collections. Major holdings
include the University of Iowa Museum of Art and the Cedar Rapids Museum
of Art (IA). Several publications and videos focus on Lasansky and his
work, including Made in America: 50 Years of Printmaking by Mauricio
Lasansky (Springfield Art Museum, Springfield, MO, 1994), and Lasansky
Printmaker (Kevin Kelly, producer and director, video, nd). A documentary
video by Lane Wyrick, The Nazi Drawings, won Best Documentary and
Best Director awards at the New York International Independent Film Festival
in 2001.
His numerous awards include five Guggenheim Fellowships (1943, 44, 45,
53 & 63), Distinguished Teaching of Art Award, College Art Association
(1980), Nominated for Wolf Foundation Award in the Arts, Jerusalem, Israel
(1982), Honorary Award in Arts & Humanities, Commission for the Aging
(1983), and Academician, National Academy of Arts & Design, New York
(1990). In 1999 was the 14th recipient of the Iowa Award, the state of
Iowas highest citizen award. The award is bestowed by the Iowa Centennial
Foundation approximately every five years. Past recipients include Herbert
Hoover, Jay N. Darling, James Van Allen, George Gallup, Meredith Willson,
and Simon Estes. Lasansky has received honorary doctorate degrees from
Iowa Wesley College (1959), Pacific Lutheran University (1969), Carleton
College (1979), and Coe College (1985).
Through his teaching and innovative studio work, Lasansky was instrumental
in the revaluation of printmaking as a creative rather than a reproductive
process. Many of his works are extremely large and have the visual impact
generally associated with paintings. Imagery ranges from figurative to
abstract, with family members providing the subject for many pieces. Although
his work can be playful, he is perhaps best known for images steeped in
social commentary, including his series of Nazi Drawings and
Kaddish prints which examine the brutality of Nazi Germany.
The Luther Fine Arts Collection contains four prints by Lasansky, three
of which were purchased through the Luther College Fine Arts Festivals
in the 1960s. The other was part of a large group of works given to the
college in 1997 by William Heintz.
Ref: The Dictionary of Art, Macmillan Publishers Limited, London,
New York, 1996; Kuhlmann, Gary, "First Impressions," Iowa
Alumni Magazine, June 2000, pp. 22-6; Marquis Whos Who in
American Art, New Providence, NJ, 2001-02; www.uiowa.edu,
Dec. 12, 2002.
Updated
03/21/2006
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