Louis
Lozowick was born in Russia and studied at the Kiev Art School.
He came to New York in 1906 and studied at the National Academy
of Design with Leon Kroll and Emil Carlsen. He graduated from Ohio
State University in 1918 and then went to Europe. While there he
studied in Paris and Berlin and was influenced by the Constructivists,
De Stijl and Bauhaus philosophies. He served on the editorial board
of the New Masses and was active as a lecturer and writer. He was
in the graphics division of the New York City WPA from 1934 to 1940
and was a member of the American Printmakers as well as the American
Society of Printers, Sculptors and Gravers. His work was included
in the AIGA 50 Prints of the Years in 1932, 33 and 34. Lozowick’s
lithographic work featured his interest in the repetitious form
of windows, pipes, towers, tanks and smokestacks of the factories,
skyscrapers and bridges of New Jersey and New York.
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Issues:
June-
July 1940
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