- Boris Lurie
Boris Lurie (
July 18 1924 –January 7 2008 ) was aNew York City -based artist and writer. He co-founded the NO!Art movement which calls for art leading to social action. His controversial work, often related to theHolocaust , has frequently irritated critics and curators.Lurie was born in
Leningrad into a Jewish family and grew up inRiga . From 1941 to 1945 he was imprisoned in German concentration camps; his mother, grandmother and sister were killed by theNazi s.In 1946 he came to New York and produced several figurative paintings processing his wartime memories. One of his best known and most controversial works is "Railroad Collage" (1959), a
collage of two photographs showing apin-up girl undressing in the midst of corpses of gas chamber victims on a flatcar. He continued with several etchings, sculptures and paintings, often with Holocaust or death themes.In 1960 he founded the NO!Art movement together with
Sam Goodman and Stanley Fisher, out of a sense of disillusionment with the contemporary art scene. The goal was to have art address the disconcerting truths: racism, imperialism, sexim, colonialism, depravity. The movement favors "totally unabashed self-expression leading to social action" and is opposed to the worldwide capitalist "investment art market", topop-art that celebratesconsumerism and to decorative "salon art" such asabstract expressionism . Lurie's art and the NO!Art movement were largely ignored by the establishment, and in 1970 Lurie wrote his critique "MOMA as Manipulator".Pieces by Lurie are now contained in the permanent collections of the
National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.) and theMuseum of Modern Art (MOMA; NYC). In 2001, the NO!Art movement was subject of a retrospective at theUniversity of Chicago , theUniversity of Nebraska and at theWhitney Museum of American Art (NYC).In 2002, Amikam Goldman completed a documentary on Boris Lurie entitled "No!Art Man", which was premiered at the Anthology Film Archives with Mr. Lurie present.
Lurie's art has found more resonance in Germany than in the United States. Germany saw two large exhibitions of his work in 1995 and 2004. A documentary, "Shoah and Pin-Ups: The NO!-Artist Boris Lurie", was shown on German TV in 2007.
On January 7th, 2008, Lurie died from
kidney failure , days after having suffered a stroke. At age 83, he was the last surviving founder of the NO!Art movement.ources
* [http://thevillager.com/vil_95/borislurieuneasy.html Boris Lurie: Uneasy visions, uncomfortable truths] . "
The Villager ", Volume 74, Number 42. 23 February 2005
* [http://www.jewishquarterly.org/article.asp?articleid=119 The artist as provocateur] , "Jewish Quarterly", Autumn 2005, Number 199. Includes an interview.
* [http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/0,1518,487431,00.html Die Nackten und die Toten] . "Der Spiegel ", 8 June 2007. de icon
* [http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/171001.html Obituary]External links
* [http://www.no-art.info/ NO!Art website]
* [http://www.no-art.info/lurie/_intro-en.html Short biography and list of exhibitions]
* [http://www.borislurie-derfilm.de/ Shoah and Pin-Ups] , the movie
* [http://www.vimeo.com/311350 Selection of documentary "No!Art Man"] , including archival footage and photographs
* [http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7229092368307918755 Discussion with makers of Lurie documentary] de icon
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