At the Threshold of Brilliance: The Brief but Splendid Career of Harold J. Rabinovitz
At the Threshold of Brilliance: The Brief but Splendid Career of Harold J. Rabinovitz
A native of Springfield, Massachusetts, HAROLD J. RABINOVITZ (1915-1944) earned a fine arts degree from Yale in 1935, studied at the Art Students League in New York City and rose quickly to prominence in American art circles before his burgeoning career was cut short just nine years later by his untimely death while a Japanese prisoner of war during World War II. In the brief span of six years between his college graduation and enlistment in the U.S. Army, the award-winning artist exhibited at the nation's leading museums (including the Carnegie, Whitney, Corcoran, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and National Academy of Design) as well as the 1939 World's Fair. Although a major retrospective of the artist's work was staged in 1952, Rabinovitz, like so many of the "neglected generation" of American realist painters of the Great Depression, has since faded into relative obscurity in art historical circles. Based on eight years of research and aided immeasurably by the discovery of a family scrapbook and a treasure trove of paintings, prints and drawings hidden from public view for more than sixty years, this biography and catalogue raisonne of the artist's production seeks to restore the reputation and reveal once more the genius of a talented artist whose tragic wartime death ended a highly promising artistic career.
Author: Arthur D. Hittner
Publisher: Apple Ridge Fine Arts
Published: 05/09/2017
Pages: 186
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.12lbs
Size: 10.00h x 8.00w x 0.51d
ISBN: 9780998981000
About the Author
Hittner, Arthur D.: - ARTHUR D. HITTNER has written extensively about American art of the Thirties and Forties, including articles for Fine Art Connoisseur, Antiques & Fine Art and American Art Review. He is also the author of Honus Wagner: The Life of Baseball's Flying Dutchman (McFarland, 1996), winner of the Seymour Medal awarded by the Society for American Baseball Research for the best work of baseball biography or history published in 1996.