• Biography
  • Exhibitions
  • Drawing
  • Painting (1929-47)
  • Construction (1932-45)
  • Sculpture (1945-69)
  • Public Commission (1955-78)
  • Photogram (1932-41)
  • Lithography
  • Bibliography
  • Contact
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Theodore Roszak

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(1907-1981) First generation New York abstract expressionist artist

sculptor, painter, draughtsman

Theodore Roszak

  • Biography
  • Exhibitions
  • Drawing
  • Painting (1929-47)
  • Construction (1932-45)
  • Sculpture (1945-69)
  • Public Commission (1955-78)
  • Photogram (1932-41)
  • Lithography
  • Bibliography
  • Contact
1955-56_Prometheus_thumb.jpg

Prometheus I, 1955-56

"The Titan, Prometheus, 1956 - who stole fire from the gods to give to man, who saw the future and suffered Zeus' vengeful anger for it- sparks an abstract sculptural tribute. Diagonal thrusts and crescents surrounding starbursts teeter in precarious bilateral symmetry, the conceptual invocation of this giant. In this modern form they renew the ancient story and revitalize its message."

[1985, "Sculptural Expressions Seven Artists in Metal and Drawing 1947-1960", Sarah Lawrence College Gallery]

 

"The "Prometheus" series will of course deal largely with the sun, and fire, and relate itself more directly to man. It gets down the essential origins, water, fire, rock, ground, stars and movement. It is that kind of reiteration of those basic qualities."

[Theodore Roszak interview with Elliott, 1956, p. 20-21]

Prometheus I, 1955-56

"The Titan, Prometheus, 1956 - who stole fire from the gods to give to man, who saw the future and suffered Zeus' vengeful anger for it- sparks an abstract sculptural tribute. Diagonal thrusts and crescents surrounding starbursts teeter in precarious bilateral symmetry, the conceptual invocation of this giant. In this modern form they renew the ancient story and revitalize its message."

[1985, "Sculptural Expressions Seven Artists in Metal and Drawing 1947-1960", Sarah Lawrence College Gallery]

 

"The "Prometheus" series will of course deal largely with the sun, and fire, and relate itself more directly to man. It gets down the essential origins, water, fire, rock, ground, stars and movement. It is that kind of reiteration of those basic qualities."

[Theodore Roszak interview with Elliott, 1956, p. 20-21]

 Steel brazed with nickel-silver  Height: 15 inches.  Collection: Hort Family Collection, NY.

Steel brazed with nickel-silver

Height: 15 inches.

Collection: Hort Family Collection, NY.

Unless specified all images

© Estate of Theodore Roszak / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY.