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Michael Mazur, 1935 - 2009

Painter, printmaker, teacher, art historian, curator, political/social/arts activist, Red Sox and Celtics fan
By LLOYD SCHWARTZ  |  August 27, 2009

0908_mazur-main
COUNT UGOLINO IN CANTO XXXIII Every detail of Mazur’s monotype contributes to the tragic insight.

VIEWMore paintings by Michael Mazur

"He was so alive," a friend wrote to me a few days after Michael Mazur died, on August 18. Painter, printmaker, teacher, art historian, curator, political/social/arts activist, Red Sox and Celtics fan, Michael Mazur lived more than just one full life — and with boundless, tireless energy. I'm lucky to have counted him and his wife, poet Gail Mazur, among my dearest friends.

No one made me laugh harder than Mike — the worse the pun (though occasionally there'd be a brilliant one), the bigger Gail's groan, the more I'd laugh. One summer I was visiting them at their summer home in Provincetown. They were teaching at the Fine Arts Work Center — an institution particularly dear to them. (Both served on the FAWC board of trustees — Mike as chair for five years.) Mike was giving a talk there about monotypes — the form of printmaking closest to painting (no two are exactly alike), and for which his innovations are famous. That morning, whoever was supposed to introduce him canceled, and Mike asked me to step in. Since I hadn't prepared anything, my brief introduction was more personal than the usual list of distinctions. I talked about how even though Mike was one of the funniest people I knew, he was also a serious artist and thinker. After his talk, several people told me they were puzzled by my remarks. Mike was such a tough and demanding teacher, they had no idea he could be funny. Of course, that humor and that seriousness came from the same life force. Fortunately for his friends, we could have both.

Michael Burton Mazur was born in New York in 1935 and grew up in Manhattan, a privileged only child. He attended the celebrated Horace Mann High School in Riverdale. (Anthony Lewis, Elliott Carter, Roy Cohn, Tom Lehrer, Renée Richards, and Jack Kerouac are among its other illustrious alumni; contemporary art curator Henry Geldzahler and cartoonist Ed Koren were Mike's classmates and friends.) At Amherst College, he spent his sophomore summer studying with Smith College artist and printmaker Leonard Baskin and took a year off to spend in Italy — one of his great loves. (Titian was a special favorite.) And he married Gail Beckwith, who was a student at Smith. (They just celebrated their 50th anniversary.) His graduate work was at the Yale School of Art and Architecture, where Neil Welliver and Fairfield Porter were among his teachers; he had his first solo exhibition in 1960, the year after he received his BFA. Working toward his MFA, he became sculptor Naum Gabo's assistant. In 1961, he started teaching: printmaking, life drawing, and anatomy at Rhode Island School of Design. On a Guggenheim, in 1964, he moved to Cambridge with his family — the Mazurs now had two children, Daniel and Kathe.

Shows began to happen. Awards began to accumulate. In 1965, he published his first unqualified masterpiece, a portfolio of 14 lithographs, powerful black and white scenes in a mental hospital called Images from a Locked Ward, his first artistic descent into Hell. In 1968, he published his first image based directly on Dante's Inferno, in Boston's Impressions Workshop fundraising portfolio for the group Artists Against Racism and the War.

He refused to repeat himself. He explored narrative images (curating a show at MIT called The Narrative Impulse) and nature images, images based on Chinese landscapes (after a trip to China in 1987) and abstraction. He wrote a landmark essay on monoprints for the catalogue of a show at the Metropolitan Museum called "The Painterly Print" (it came to Boston's Museum of Fine Arts in 1981) and had a key one-man show, "Branching: The Art of Michael Mazur," that traveled to the DeCordova Museum in 1997 — pictures with ambiguous images of trees that also look like arteries. (In 1993, he had been diagnosed with heart disease.) In 2000, the Zimmerli Museum at Rutgers organized a major retrospective, "The Prints of Michael Mazur," that also included recent paintings and an ambitious catalogue raisonné. The show opened at Boston's MFA before traveling to the Minneapolis Art Institute, the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford, and, finally, the Zimmerli.

Mike also got more and more involved in the literary world. In 1982, he created a luminous, unsettling series of flower monoprints to accompany (not exactly to illustrate) a new translation of Baudelaire's Les fleurs du mal by Richard Howard that was published by David R. Godine. His paintings and drawings begin to appear on the covers of literary magazines: a portrait of Cavafy on Stratis Haviaras's magazine Arion's Dolphin; portraits of Seamus Heaney, Bill Knott, and Michael Harper for the issues of Ploughshares they guest-edited, and dazzling covers for Gail Mazur's two issues. Gail used paintings by Mike on the covers of three of her poetry books — The Pose of Happiness (a bedraggled but heroic wingback chair), The Common (a mysterious Cambridge backyard scene), and Zeppo's First Wife (a daffy, delicious abstraction) — and they collaborated on broadsides of her poems "Next Door" and "Young Apple Tree." He also created a sinister cover — the jawbone of a shark — for Robert Pinsky's collection The Want Bone.

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  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Media, AL East Division, Michael Mazur,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY LLOYD SCHWARTZ
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  •   BAROQUE AND BEYOND  |  September 14, 2009
    Ten-best lists usually come at the end of the season, but this year the Phoenix has asked its critics to provide a calendar of 10 events that, at least on paper, might wind up on an end-of-season Top 10. Boston, in case you didn't know it, is a great city for classical music, so it's not easy to keep the list short. But here goes.
  •   MICHAEL MAZUR, 1935 - 2009  |  August 27, 2009
    "He was so alive ," a friend wrote to me a few days after Michael Mazur died, on August 18.
  •   MIDSUMMER MADNESS  |  August 18, 2009
    After a relatively quiet summer, I saw Boston Midsummer Opera's Cosí fan tutte at BU's Tsai Center. Then I raced out to Tanglewood for a Mark Morris program accompanied by Yo-Yo Ma and Emanuel Ax, a BSO matinee with Ma, and all six concerts in the annual Festival of Contemporary Music.
  •   MICHAEL STEINBERG, 1928-2009  |  August 03, 2009
    Michael Steinberg, who died of cancer last Sunday morning in Minneapolis, was one of the great voices raised in defense of high culture, and Boston was lucky that he was based here for so many years.
  •   FRENCH KISS  |  July 10, 2009
    Productions I attended at the Opéra and Opéra Comique would be rare in New York, let alone Boston — though some of the performers would be familiar.

 See all articles by: LLOYD SCHWARTZ

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