Nationality American Name Friedel Dzubas | Known for Abstract art | |
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Movement Color Field painting, Lyrical Abstraction Education Prussian Academy of Arts (1936–1939) Artwork Echo, Moonhunt, Distant Sea, Lady Burn, Untitled, Ikarus Periods Lyrical abstraction, Color Field, Modern art Awards Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada |
Dzubas Friedel 組巴斯·弗里德爾 (1915-1994) Abstract Expressionism Post-Painterly Abstraction Americans
Friedel Dzubas (April 20, 1915 in Berlin, Germany – 1994 in Auburndale, Massachusetts) was a German-born American abstract painter.
Contents
- Dzubas Friedel 1915 1994 Abstract Expressionism Post Painterly Abstraction Americans
- Life and work
- Technique
- Teaching
- Selected Museum collections
- Awards
- References

Life and work
Friedel Dzubas studied art in his native land before fleeing Nazi Germany in 1939 and settling in New York City. In Manhattan during the early 1950s, he shared a studio with fellow abstract painter Helen Frankenthaler. He began exhibiting his Abstract expressionist paintings at this time.

His work was included in the Ninth Street Show in New York City in 1951, and in group exhibitions at the Leo Castelli gallery, the Stable Gallery, and the Tibor de Nagy Gallery among others. After the Ninth Street Show annual invitational exhibitions were held at the Stable Gallery throughout the 1950s. The poster of the second New York Painting and Sculpture Annual at The Stable Gallery in 1953, included an introduction by Clement Greenberg:

In the 1960s he became associated with Color field painting and Lyrical Abstraction. He was included in Post-painterly abstraction a 1964 exhibition curated by Clement Greenberg. Dzubas was a friend of Clement Greenberg, who in turn introduced him to Jackson Pollock and other artists.

His large work (up to 24 feet (7.3 m) wide) became more fluid. During the last three decades of his career, Dzubas had more than sixty solo exhibitions around the world. He was represented by the André Emmerich gallery and Knoedler Contemporary Arts in New York for more than thirty years. His works were exhibited at galleries including the Anita Shapolsky Gallery and the Jacobson Howard Gallery in New York City. In 1976 he settled in Massachusetts, but also painted and lived in New York City, where his paintings were regularly exhibited.
Technique
He used Magna paint an oil based acrylic paint. Magna was originally developed by the paintmakers Leonard Bocour and Sam Golden for and also used by Morris Louis. Dzubas would apply thick layers of color over washes, scrubbing the paint into the unprimed canvas. Dzubas used staining, brushing and other ways of applying color. His paintings were generally large in size and scale, but he made many very small paintings as well.
Teaching
He was a teacher and lecturer at:
he had the longest relationship with the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where he taught from 1976 to 1983.