Ossip Zadkine

Ossip Zadkine (Russian: Осип Цадкин; 28 January 1888 – 25 November 1967) was a Russian-born French naturalized artist. He is primarily known as a sculptor, but also produced paintings and lithographs.[1]

Ossip Zadkine
Zadkine in 1914
Born
Yossel Aronovich Tsadkin

(1888-01-28)28 January 1888
Died25 November 1967(1967-11-25) (aged 79)
Paris, France
Resting placeCimetière Montparnasse
Known forSculpture, painting, lithography
MovementCubism, Art Deco

Early years and education

Zadkine was born on 28 January 1888 as Yossel Aronovich Tsadkin (Russian: Иосель Аронович Цадкин) in the city of Vitsebsk, part of the Russian Empire (now Belarus).[2][3][4] He was born to a Jewish father and a mother named Zippa-Dvoyra, who he claimed to be of Scottish origin.[5] Ossip had 5 siblings: sisters Mira, Roza and Fania and brothers Mark and Moses.

At the age of fifteen, Zadkine was sent by his father to Sunderland to learn English and ‘good manners’. He then moved to London and attended lessons at the Regent Street Polytechnic where he considered the teachers to be too conservative.[6]

Zadkine settled in Paris in 1910. He studied at the École des Beaux-Arts for six months. In 1911 he lived and worked in La Ruche. While in Paris he joined the Cubist movement, working in a Cubist idiom from 1914 to 1925. He later developed his own style, one that was strongly influenced by African and Greek art.[7]

Career

In 1921 he obtained French citizenship.[5] Zadkine served as a stretcher-bearer in the French Army during World War I, and was wounded in action. He spent World War II in the US. His best-known work is probably the sculpture The Destroyed City (1951-1953), representing a man without a heart, a memorial to the destruction of the center of the Dutch city of Rotterdam in 1940 by the Nazi-German Luftwaffe.[8]

He taught sculpture classes at Académie de la Grande Chaumière until 1958, students of his included artists Geula Dagan (1925–2008) and Genevieve Pezet.[9]

Death and legacy

Zadkine died in Paris in 1967 at the age of 79 after undergoing abdominal surgery[8] and was interred in the Cimetière du Montparnasse.

Museums

His former home and studio in Montparnasse is now the Musée Zadkine.[10] When his former wife Prax died, she donated the house and art studio to the City of Paris for the formation of Musée Zadkine.[10]

There is also a Musée Zadkine in the village of Les Arques in the Midi-Pyrénées region of France. Zadkine lived in Les Arques for a number of years, and while there, carved an enormous Christ on the Cross and Pieta that are featured in the 12th-century church which stands opposite the museum.

Personal life

In August 1920, Zadkine married Valentine Prax (1897–1981), an Algerian-born painter of Sicilian and French-Catalan descent.[11][12] Prax and Zadkine had no children.[13]

Zadkine was a neighbor in Montparnasse and a friend of Henry Miller and he was represented by the character "Borowski" in Miller's novel, Tropic of Cancer (1934).[10][14][15] His other neighbors there included; Chaim Soutine, and Tsuguharu Foujita.[10]

While living in exile during wartime in Manhattan from 1942 to 1945, Zadkine had a relationship with American artist Carol Janeway and he created several portraits of her.[16]

The artist's only child, Nicolas Hasle (born 1960), was the result of his affair with a Danish woman, Annelise Hasle.[17] Since 2009, Hasle, a psychiatrist, who had been acknowledged by the artist and had his parentage legally established in France in the 1980s, has been party to a lawsuit with the City of Paris to establish his claim to his father's estate.[18][17][19]

Awards

Legacy

  • A school in Rotterdam was named after Zadkine[21], as part of their training they even have Zadkine airlines.[22]

Public collections

Among the public collections holding works by Ossip Zadkine are:

gollark: From the official docs.
gollark: "Features:- Fortunes/Dwarf Fortress output/Chuck Norris jokes on boot (wait, IS this a feature?)- (other) viruses (how do you get them in the first place? running random files like this?) cannot do anything particularly awful to your computer - uninterceptable (except by crashing the keyboard shortcut daemon, I guess) keyboard shortcuts allow easy wiping of the non-potatOS data so you can get back to whatever nonsense you do fast- Skynet (rednet-ish stuff over websocket to my server) and Lolcrypt (encoding data as lols and punctuation) built in for easy access!- Convenient OS-y APIs - add keyboard shortcuts, spawn background processes & do "multithreading"-ish stuff.- Great features for other idio- OS designers, like passwords and fake loading (est potatOS.stupidity.loading [time], est potatOS.stupidity.password [password]).- Digits of Tau available via a convenient command ("tau")- Potatoplex and Loading built in ("potatoplex"/"loading") (potatoplex has many undocumented options)!- Stack traces (yes, I did steal them from MBS)- Backdoors- er, remote debugging access (it's secured, via ECC signing on disks and websocket-only access requiring a key for the other one)- All this useless random junk can autoupdate (this is probably a backdoor)!- EZCopy allows you to easily install potatOS on another device, just by sticking it in the disk drive of any potatOS device!- fs.load and fs.dump - probably helpful somehow.- Blocks bad programs (like the "Webicity" browser).- Fully-featured process manager.- Can run in "hidden mode" where it's at least not obvious at a glance that potatOS is installed.- Convenient, simple uninstall with the "uninstall" command.- Turns on any networked potatOS computers!- Edits connected signs to use as ad displays.- A recycle bin.- An exorcise command, which is like delete but better.- Support for a wide variety of Lorem Ipsum."
gollark: You would need to get rid of the autoupdate capabilities of potatOS itself, or swap them to your own pastebins/github stuff, and then keep everything in line with the current versions.
gollark: Anyway, <@151391317740486657>, what you can do is fork potatOS and get rid of the bits you don't like, but that's also hard (less, though) and would be very difficult to keep updated.
gollark: That doesn't count.

See also

References

  1. Zadkine Research Center
  2. "Une enfance en Russie". paris.fr.
  3. "Александр Лисов. Цадкин и Витебск". chagal-vitebsk.com. Archival materials reported in this article state that Iosel-Shmuila Aronovich Tsadkin, was of Jewish faith and studied in the Vitebsk City Technical School between 1900 and 1904, including two years in one class with would-be artists Marc Chagall (then Movsha Shagal) and Victor Mekler (then Avigdor Mekler). Thus, contrary to what Zadkine himself was saying, his father did not convert to the Russian Orthodox religion and his mother was not of a Scottish extraction.
  4. "Людмила Хмельницкая. Витебское окружение Марка Шагала". chagal-vitebsk.com.
  5. Ossip Joselyn Zadkine Facts, YourDictionary
  6. "Ossip Zadkine, 1888-1967". Sculpture International Rotterdam.
  7. "La source grecque, l'enracinement d'une "terre"". paris.fr.
  8. "Sculptor Dies". The Age. 27 November 1967. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  9. Hauer, Caroline (2019-03-20). "Paris: Le Messager, une oeuvre monumentale d'Ossip Zadkine - Quai d'Orsay - VIIème". Paris la Douce (in French). Retrieved 2020-06-12.
  10. "Musée Zadkine". Artist's Studio Museum Network. Retrieved 2020-06-12.
  11. Birnbaum, Paula J. (2017). Women Artists in Interwar France: Framing Femininities. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN 9781351536714.
  12. Wolpert, Martin; Winter, Jeffrey (2004). Modern Figurative Paintings: The Paris Connection. Schiffer Publishing. ISBN 9780764319624.
  13. "Prax, Valentine Henriette". Benezit Dictionary of Artists, Oxford Art Online. doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.b00145672. Retrieved 2020-06-12.
  14. "Musée Zadkine". Walking Paris with Henry Miller. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
  15. Frederick Turner: Renegade: Henry Miller and the Making of "Tropic of Cancer", Yale University Press, 2012.
  16. Art, Philadelphia Museum of. "Philadelphia Museum of Art - Collections Object : Carol Janeway with Zadkine Sculpture". philamuseum.org. Retrieved 2017-04-13.
  17. "Paris Must Justify Right To Sculptor Ossip Zadkine's Estate". Artforum.com. 2011-03-31. Retrieved 2020-06-12.
  18. "The Art Newspaper". theartnewspaper.com.
  19. "Ossip Zadkine: Who Owns the Sculptor's Estate?". Center for Art Law. 2011-04-03. Retrieved 2020-06-12.
  20. "Ossip Zadkine – Obituary". The Montreal Gazette. 27 November 1967. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  21. Zadkine college
  22. Zadkine Airlines Rotterdam
  23. Rijksmonumenten
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