Unknown 1953 14x27
Joseph Hirsch
Drawing : Pencil Sketch on Paper
Size : 7.5x20.5 in | 19x52 cm
Framed : 14x27 in | 36x69 cm
Reduced
- 🔥Framed Pencil Sketch - Inquire - A Steal $1,400
Year1953
Hand SignedLower Center
Condition Excellent
Framed with GlassAntique Gold Frame with White Mat
Purchased fromPrivate Collector 1996
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID152341
Joseph Hirsch - United States
Art Brokerage: Joseph Hirsch American Artist: b. 1910-1981. Joseph Hirsch was a painter, muralist, illustrator, and printmaker who was born and educated in Philadelphia. He attended the School of Industrial Art between 1928 and 1931, and in 1932, went to New York to study with George Luks. He completed several murals in Philadelphia including Football, Integration, Beginnings of Early Unionism, and Adoption. As a pictorial war correspondent during World War II, Hirsch made about seventy-five paintings and drawings between 1943 and 1944 in the South Pacific, Africa, and Italy. Hirsch once said that he wanted his work to reveal his beliefs but never turned to propaganda, as so many artists of his time. He did, however, portray people as heroes in a deeply humanistic, positive manner, using an almost caricature-like exaggeration, especially in early canvasses such as Two Men. With classic techniques, he explored prosaic subject matter ranging in theme from washing windows to leading invocations, sometimes with mocking overtones. As a social realist and humanist, Hirsch frequently portrayed heroic images of ordinary people doing everyday tasks. For Hirsch, all paintings were a celebration of life and everything within the realm of living circumstance was a font of inspiration of almost equal measure. Listings wanted.