George Luks was
an artist admired for his gutsy, true-to-life
depictions of modern life. Born in Williamsport,
Pennsylvania, Luks studied art in brief stints
in 1884 at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine
Arts in Philadelphia and in 1889 in Germany
at the Staatliche Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf.
Not one to adhere to a class agenda, Luks preferred
to study art on his own and traveled to Paris
and London in 1889-1890 to see the art in those
cities. In 1894 he began a career as a newspaper
illustrator with the Philadelphia Press. In
Philadelphia Luks made friends with the artists
William Glackens, Robert Henri, Everett Shinn,
and John Sloan.
By 1896 Luks had moved to New York draw illustrations
for the New York World. He exhibited with The
Eight in 1908 and in the Armory Show in 1913.
In the early 1920s Luks made several trips to
the coal region of Pennsylvania, where he himself
once worked as a breaker boy, depicting his
surroundings in oils, watercolors, and drawings.
After teaching at the Art Students League from
1920 to 1924, he started the George Luks School
of Painting in New York.
Luks temperament was mercurial – in turn
lusty, tender, brawling, and dignified –
and his wit, vitality, and talent eventually
attracted Duncan Phillips. Writing in A Collection
in the Making, Phillips describes Luks as “an
individualist with a buoyant belief in his own
genius and gusto in his copious enjoyments of
his chosen subjects...We are reminded of Hals,
then of Goya and again of Courbet. But these
painters of the past who also wielded their
brushes with exhilarating ease and racy personal
expression lacked the mischievous irony which
is the very autograph of Luks...When in full
swing he can paint as well as Courbet, surpassing
him in space composition and his rival in rich
impasto...”
Adapted from Eye, DWS/CM.
Luks' Technique
The technique that Luks evolved for himself
balanced sharp observation against broad execution.
Using sharp contrasts of light and dark that
never degenerated into mere silhouettes, he
caught the shape and weight of his subjects
in a few thick strokes of paint. He made his
work look easy, which it was not, and fun to
do, which it apparently was. Though he vastly
simplified what he saw, none of Luks's pictures
could be called art-for-art's-sake; he was a
reporter in oils with a dramatic flair like
that of his contemporaries John Sloan and George
Bellows, and like them he regularly suppressed
irrelevant details for the sake of a few telling
ones.
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