Born
in 1922 in New Brunswick, New Jersey, Baskin was reared in Brooklyn,
New York. The son of a Rabbi, Baskin was educated at a yeshiva
(Jewish religious college), which had a profound effect on his
aesthetic. Committed to art at an early age, Baskin had his first
exhibition. of sculpture, at the Glickman Studio Gallery, New York,
at the age of seventeen. He studied at Yale University from 1941 to
1943 and received his B.A. at the New School for Social Research in
1949. Baskin spent 1950 and 1951 abroad, studying in Paris and
Florence. In 1953 he began teaching printmaking and sculpture at
Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he remained until
1974. It was while he was at Smith College that he founded Gehenna
Press, a small private press specializing in fine book production.
He moved to England in 1974 and stayed till 1983 when he returned to
America.. These nine years were enormously productive and besides
sculptures he created a fine selection of prints and paintings.
Baskin became intrigued by Greek history, philosophy and mythology
at an early age and this study inspired many of his sculptures and
paintings. Other influences were early 20th century sculptors,
notably Ernst Barlach
Leonard Baskin was one of the universal artists of the 20th century.
He was a sculptor of renown. He was a writer and illustrator of
books ranging from the bible to children's' stories and natural
history. He was a talented water-colourist and a superb, prolific
print-maker. His prints ranged from woodcuts through lithography and
etching; his subjects covered portraits, flower studies, biblical,
classical and mythological scenes. Baskin’s sculpture, watercolors,
and prints are in the permanent collections of most of the world's
major art galleries and museums, including the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, the Vatican Museum, the
Smithsonian Institute and the Tate Gallery in London. Among Baskin's
many commissions are a bas relief he made for the Franklin D.
Roosevelt Memorial and the Holocaust Memorial statue erected on the
site of the first Jewish cemetery in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Baskin won
many awards including the Gold Medal of the National Academy of Arts
and Letters, the Special Medal of Merit of the American Institute of
Graphic Arts and the Gold Medal of the National Academy of Design.
Baskin was a noted philatelist and
built an important and eclectic collection of postage stamps.
From
Wolman-Prints.com