The Extraordinary Influence of Alexander Liberman
The artist and editor's large-scale paintings and sculptures earned him a place in some of the most prestigious art museums in the world
The name Alexander Liberman may be synonymous with Condé Nast Publications, but his role as a painter and sculptor of large-scale public works has earned him a place in some of the most prestigious art museums in the world. He left the Soviet Union in 1921 and eventually settled in Paris, where he started his career in magazines, working for various French publications. He arrived in New York in 1941—bringing with him a European sensibility of graphic design and a feeling for Russian Constructivism.
Liberman’s two careers in New York ran parallel to each other—he was named editorial director at Condé Nast in 1962, and his first solo exhibition was in 1960 at the Betty Parsons Gallery in New York. His minimalist paintings are often comprised of circular forms in primary colors and display his knowledge of graphic design. Liberman’s industrial-sized sculptures are almost all in the same cherry-red color and intertwined geometric and organic forms. One of his most notable public commissions was from the architect Philip Johnson, for the 1963 World’s Fair. In both of his careers, he was able to successfully carve himself a memorable place in the landscape of American modernism.
DATES
Born: 1912, Kiev, Russia
Died: 1999, Miami, Florida
RECENT EXHIBITIONS
2012, Alexander Liberman: After Image, Paintings and Sculpture from the 1950s, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York, New York
2008, American Abstraction, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York, New York
2003, Photographs of Artists by Alexander Liberman, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California
RECENT PUBLICATION
It’s Modern: The Eye and Visual Influence of Alexander Liberman by Charles Churchward—Rizzoli, 2013
GALLERY
Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York, New York
AUCTION PRICES
Untitled, 1982; Painted steel, 31¾ × 28 × 20 inches; Sotheby’s, June 12, 2014; Sale 274, $8,750
Fire, 1962; Acrylic on canvas, 33 × 42 inches; Christie’s, March 6, 2014; Sale 2824, $11,875