| Alexander
Liberman (1912 - 1999)
Born in 1912 in Kiev,
Russia, Alexander Liberman became an academic and post-Impressionist
painter in Europe before moving to the United States in 1941.
From that time, he painted and sculpted in abstract styles,
often using the circle which he asserted was the ideal shape.
In his sculpture, he was revolutionary because of his use of
industrial materials, factory building methods, and large-scale
size.
The first nine years of his life, he lived in Kiev with his
family where the father was in the lumber business and his mother
was devoted to the theatre. The Libermans left Russia in 1921,
and Alexander studied in England and France, first in London
and then in Paris with Andre Lhote from 1929 to 1931. He studied
philosophy and mathematics at the Sorbonne and architecture
at Ecole des Beaux-Arts. In the 1930s, Liberman designed stage
sets, and worked briefly with a landscape architect. He earned
money by working as an assistant to the poster designer Cassandre,
and did editorial and technical work for the magazine "Vu,"
one of the earliest illustrated periodicals and the first magazine
to include photographs. Eventually he became managing director,
but left the business in 1936 to focus on painting, writing
and filmmaking.
In 1940, he escaped with his family to an unoccupied zone in
France, and via Spain, the family arrived in New York in 1941.
Again he took employment in the publishing business, this time
at "Vogue" magazine. Twenty years later, he became
Editorial Director of all the Conde Nast Publications, and he
held this job until 1994, when he retired. He was responsible
for much of the leading-edge aspects of the magazine by commissioning
work by avant-garde artists such as Joseph Cornell, Salvador
Dali, Marc Chagall, and Marcel Duchamp. He had the distinction
of being the only publisher allowed to print images of the Matisse
chapel in Vence, France, and he used drip paintings by Jackson
Pollock as backdrops for fashion shoots.
By the mid-1950s, Liberman had also progressed with his own
creative efforts as a painter and photographer and was exhibiting
in galleries and museums in New York City. In 1959, he began
welding steel, and started making sculpture on a large scale
that required industrial machinery and eventually a large staff
of assistants to meet the increasing demand for his work. It
was said of him, that he emulated the industrialization that
he found so impressive in America when he emigrated in 1941.
He gained prestigious public commissions beginning in 1963
when architect Philip Johnson hired him to do a work for the
1963 Worlds Fair in New York City. One of his first public commissions
was from the architect Philip Johnson for a pavilion at the
1963 World's Fair.
Liberman died in November, 1999 at the age of 87.
His sculptures and paintings are in many collections including
the Metropolitan Museum, Museum of Modern Art, Corcoran, Hirshhorn
Museum & Sculpture Garden, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum,
the Tate Gallery in London, and the Los Angeles County Museum
of Art. In addition, Storm King Art Center has three monumental
Liberman sculptures in it's collection.
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