Jack Levine
Framed 20.75 in x 25,5 in
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Jack Levine’s Warsaw Ghetto Study #1 is a haunting and psychologically charged work on paper that reflects the artist’s lifelong engagement with themes of political violence, human suffering, and moral conscience. Executed circa 1968-1969, the drawing belongs to a period in Levine’s career during which historical memory, Jewish identity, and the catastrophic legacy of World War II became increasingly central to his work.
Born in Boston in 1915 to Lithuanian Jewish immigrant parents, Levine emerged as one of the most distinctive figurative painters of twentieth-century American art. Throughout his career, he rejected abstraction in favor of emotionally direct narrative imagery, developing a deeply personal visual language rooted in social criticism, historical reflection, and psychological intensity. His work often drew upon the traditions of Old Master painting while confronting contemporary political and human realities with unflinching honesty.
In Warsaw Ghetto Study #1, Levine employs fluid ink wash, expressive brushwork, and rapid pencil notation to create an atmosphere of instability and emotional tension. The composition centers on a standing armed figure whose rigid posture contrasts sharply with the fragile, ghostlike figures surrounding him. The heavily worked black ink passages dissolve into translucent washes and partially erased forms, creating a sense of fragmentation and psychological unease appropriate to the subject matter.
Particularly compelling is the drawing’s tension between specificity and ambiguity. Levine avoids overt narrative detail, instead allowing gesture, shadow, and distorted figuration to convey emotional and historical weight. The faces emerge almost spectrally from the paper, while the armed figure dominates the composition through stark angular lines and dark tonal contrasts. The result is both deeply human and unsettlingly theatrical, qualities that characterize Levine’s finest works.
Works on paper played an important role within Levine’s artistic process, allowing him to work with exceptional immediacy and emotional directness. In drawings such as this, the spontaneity of ink wash and pencil reveals the expressive foundation underlying his larger painted compositions. The unfinished passages and visible revisions further reinforce the sense of urgency and psychological immediacy.
The work also reflects Levine’s enduring engagement with Jewish history and collective memory. Rather than presenting historical events as distant subjects, Levine approached them as living moral questions, infusing his figures with vulnerability, tension, and psychological complexity.
This work comes from the Estate of Charlie Campbell, the influential San Francisco gallerist and collector whose engagement with significant twentieth-century American art helped shape important private collections and exhibitions throughout the Bay Area. The Campbell provenance adds further historical resonance to the drawing and situates it within a distinguished lineage of postwar American collecting.
Atmospheric, emotionally charged, and deeply humane, Warsaw Ghetto Study #1 stands as a compelling example of Levine’s mature graphic practice and his enduring commitment to the moral and psychological power of figurative art.Jack Levine (American, 1915-2010) was an American painter and printmaker known for satirical figurative works that critiqued political power, corruption, and social inequality. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Lithuanian Jewish immigrant parents, Levine grew up in the city’s South End, where urban life and economic hardship shaped his artistic outlook. He studied at Harvard University and gained early recognition through the Works Progress Administration during the 1930s. Levine developed a distinctive style that combined social realism with references to Old Master painting, particularly the dramatic compositions of Rembrandt and El Greco. His paintings often portrayed politicians, military officers, and religious figures with exaggerated features and theatrical settings, using irony and symbolism to expose hypocrisy and abuse of power. Despite the rise of Abstract Expressionism, Levine remained committed to narrative figuration and social commentary throughout his career. His work was widely exhibited and established him as a major American figurative painter of the twentieth century. His work is held in major collections including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Provenance
Collection of Charlie Campbell, San FranciscoEstate of Charlie Campbell, San Francisco
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