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Sidney Jonas Budnick

Sidney Jonas Budnick (June 18, 1921 – August 25, 1994) was an American abstract artist. He was born and raised in New York City where he developed a passion for art early in his life.


Biography[edit]

File:SidneyJonasBudnickSouthernCrossGuggenheim.jpg
Southern Cross, 1966, Guggenheim Museum

While living in New York Sidney Budnick met the Dutch artist Piet Mondrian. He was greatly influenced by Mondrian’s work and the De Stijl art movement. He studied under Hans Hoffman, an abstract expressionist artist and teacher, and was friends with Harry Holtzman and Carl Holty, founders of the American Abstract Artists group[1].

Sidney Budnick also was was encouraged by Hilla Rebay, the artistic advisor for Solomon R. Guggenheim. In 1939 Guggenheim and Rebay opened the Museum of Non-objective Painting, later named the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Rebay supported many artist, including Sidney Budnick, by hiring them as support staff at the museum[2]. Some of Sidney Budnick’s early work is classified with other works of the Museum of Non-objective Painting[3][4].

Later work exhibited at the Portland Lawrence Gallery [5]in 2008

After serving in the army during World War II, Sidney Budnick earned his Bachelor of Art degree at the IIT Institute of Design. While there he studied under Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, the founding director of the New Bauhaus and head of the School of Design (renamed the Institute of Design in 1944)[6].

In 1952 he completed his Master in Architecture at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design studying under Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus school in Germany.

Although Sidney Budnick earned his living as an architect in California, supporting his wife and three children, he painted throughout his life until he died in 1994 in Oregon.

Sidney Budnick’s work was included in an exhibition organized by Katherine Kuh[7] at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1948, entitled, "American Abstract and Surrealist Art.” His work is included in the collections of the Guggenheim Museum, Museum of Modern Art and the J. Donald Nichols collection.



Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ http://www.americanabstractartists.org/history.htm
  2. ^ Lukach, Joan M., Hilla Rebay, In Search of the spirit in Art, New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1983, p 153
  3. ^ Wake Forest University, American Abstract Art of the 1930s and 1940s: The J. Donald Nichols Collection, 1998, p 16, 17, 112, 113
  4. ^ http://www.guggenheim.org/history.html
  5. ^ http://www.lawrencegallery.net/
  6. ^ The New Bauhaus/Institute of Design - A Legacy for Chicago (http://www.chicagobauhausbeyond.org/cbb/mission/newBauhaus.htm)
  7. ^ http://www.dictionaryofarthistorians.org/kuhk.htm

References[edit]

Wake Forest University, American Abstract Art of the 1930s and 1940s: The J. Donald Nichols Collection, 1998

Further reading[edit]

Katherine Kuh, Abstract and Surrealist American Art. Prize Winners: The Fifty-Eighth Annual Exhibition of American Painting and Sculpture, Art Institute of Chicago, 1947

External links[edit]

http://www.ltunes.com/Sidney_Jonas_Budnick/

http://www.artnet.com/artist/684643/sidney-jonas-budnick.html

http://www.askart.com/askart/b/sydney_jonas_budnick/sydney_jonas_budnick.aspx

http://www.carolinaarts.com/americanabstractart.html

http://www.historicphotoarchive.com/phot/budnick.htm

Category:American artists