Lozowick, Louis
Louis Lozowick (1892–1973) (Ukrainian: Луї Лозовик, romanized: Lui Lozovyk) was a Ukrainian-born American painter and printmaker. He is recognized as an Art Deco and Precisionist artist, and mainly produced streamline, urban-inspired monochromatic lithographs in a career that spanned 50 years. Janet Flint, then Curator of the Department of Prints and Drawings at the National Museum of American Art in Washington, D.C., wrote in 1982: "Louis Lozowick occupies a premier position among those artists whose imaginations have been touched by the city and its rich variety of architectural forms. In his paintings, drawings, and especially his superb lithographs, Lozowick achieved new aesthetic dimensions in his interpretations of the skyscrapers, smokestacks, elevated trains, and bridges of America. He was a man of diverse interests and talents – historian and critic as well as pioneering artist – whose significant contributions to the art and thought of his age are only coming to be fully recognized".
Read more on Wikipedia →Artworks by Lozowick, Louis
Granaries to Babylon
Lozowick, Louis
Skaters' Island
Lozowick, Louis
Relic of Old Rome
Lozowick, Louis
Above the City
Lozowick, Louis
Inca Sanctuary
Lozowick, Louis
Luna Park
Lozowick, Louis
Still Life #2
Lozowick, Louis
Crane
Lozowick, Louis
Construction
Lozowick, Louis
Sky Overcast
Lozowick, Louis
Aerial Landscape
Lozowick, Louis
Breakfast
Lozowick, Louis
Corner of Steel Plant
Lozowick, Louis
Self-Portrait
Lozowick, Louis
Squash
Lozowick, Louis
Granite Quarries
Lozowick, Louis
Yellow Moon
Lozowick, Louis
Willow Tree
Lozowick, Louis
Devil's Bridge, Tajikistan
Lozowick, Louis
The Quick and the Dead
Lozowick, Louis