Tanks (No. 1)
Louis Lozowick
American Art
Active as an artist, writer, and critic, Louis Lozowick is best known for stunning lithographs, such as this one, depicting urban and industrial scenes in the crisp geometric style of Precisionism. When he immigrated to the United States as a teenager, he encountered the iconography of the modern Machine Age—skyscrapers, factories, bridges, railroads—that would fascinate him for the remainder of his career. In Tanks (No. 1), Lozowick creates a celebratory vision of a nocturnal industrial landscape with a monumental storage tank rising heroically through a lattice of pipes and scaffolding. The image also speaks to progress through the juxtaposition of an airplane and a team of horses. Mastery of the lithographic medium is evident in the velvety surfaces and subtle tonal gradations, while the simplification of forms and faceted planes reveal Lozowick's debt to Cubism, Russian Constructivism, and other avant-garde styles that he saw during his travels in Europe in the 1920s.
MEDIUM
Lithograph on wove paper
DATES
1929
DIMENSIONS
Sheet: 15 13/16 x 11 3/16 in. (40.2 x 28.4 cm)
Image: 13 15/16 x 8 in. (35.4 x 20.3 cm)
(show scale)
SIGNATURE
Signed in graphite, outside of plate lower right, "LOUIS LOZOWICK" and printed in stone lower left, "LL"
INSCRIPTIONS
Writen in graphite, outside of plate, lower left "TANKS"
ACCESSION NUMBER
78.54.7
CREDIT LINE
Bequest of Samuel Zachary Gitlin
MUSEUM LOCATION
This item is not on view
CAPTION
Louis Lozowick (American, born Russia, 1892–1973). Tanks (No. 1), 1929. Lithograph on wove paper, Sheet: 15 13/16 x 11 3/16 in. (40.2 x 28.4 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Bequest of Samuel Zachary Gitlin, 78.54.7. © artist or artist's estate (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 78.54.7_PS1.jpg)
EDITION
Edition: 50 plus 5 additional impressions numbered I/X-V/ printed in 1972
IMAGE
overall, 78.54.7_PS1.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph
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RIGHTS STATEMENT
© Estate of Louis Lozowick
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