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Leon Golub was a great American artist. End of story. That’s what popped into my head the moment the elevator doors at the Met Breuer slid open to reveal “Gigantomachy II” (1966), his ...
Painter Leon Golub earned his reputation as an artist of violence. Images from the 1970s through the 1990s are parlor scenes of horror, painted to show the variety of ways humans abuse their power.
Doesn't Leon Golub Trust His Art to Speak for Itself? One of the most interesting things about Leon Golub: Paintings, 1950-2000, an exhibition currently at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, is the ...
Leon Golub, “Gigantomachy II” (1966), acrylic on linen, 304.8 x 731.5 cm The scene at the Serpentine Galleries creates a shift in our psyche. It reminds us of a time and an anti-war movement ...
Stay up to date with Leon Golub (American, 1922 - 2004) . Discover works for sale, auction results, market data, news and exhibitions on MutualArt.
This fake Leon Golub, Welcome to It, was purchased at Christie’s by Andrew Hall from Nikolas Gascard for $30,000. Courtesy of artnet. The Legal Battle.
The current celebration going on around town on behalf of Leon Golub is mostly retrospective in nature, honoring a long and powerful career of one of Chicago’s best-loved native sons. However ...
Rashid Johnson’s curatorial vision in “Et In Arcadia Ego” creates a vivid dialogue between Leon Golub’s forceful, politically charged paintings and the work of various artists who echo or expand on ...
A young artist by the name of Leon Golub, returning to his hometown of Chicago from service in World War II, was passionately aware of these and other developments in modern art.
Leon Golub was no tastemaker—unlike Rashid Johnson, who sort of is. Both came to New York out of Chicago, but disparate generations aside—Golub died at 82 in 2004 and Johnson is 46—it ...
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