Conversation

Replying to
In 1906, he emigrated to the United States, where he resumed his art studies. In 1920, he took a long trip to Europe, travelling to Paris and Berlin, where he got acquainted with El Lissitzky, learned the art of lithography and started to write for 'Broom' about art & literature
Image
Image
Image
1
48
He was one of those few artists, who also excelled as critic. He wrote for several journals, such as the American Jewish intellectual and literary journal 'Menorah Journal', the Marxist magazine 'The New Masses', of which he was also art editor, and other left-wing periodicals
Image
Image
Image
2
32
'Cleveland' (1923) by Louis Lozowick This is one of his most iconic lithographs, in which the passion for Russian constructivism and the classic utopian impulse to combine modernity, progress and humanism are strongly perceived
Image
1
55