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Expressionist painter Max Beckmann (1884 – 1950), having fled to Holland from his native Germany in order to escape the Nazi onslaught, arrived in New York shortly after the end of the war and wasted no time in securing an aggressive dealer eager to arrange liasons between him and the the post-war dollar.

"The first exhibition of Max Beckman's work since 1941 is currently being held at the Bucholz Gallery in New York. Director Kurt Valentin has assembled for this event important examples of Beckman's brush dating from 1939 to the present...Among the many drawings particularly remembered are a satirical 'Radio Singer' and a tongue-in-cheek 'Anglers', along with 'Head Waiters'."

     


Max Beckman Since the War (Art Digest Magazine, 1946)

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