Biography

  • 1914 Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, October 12ᵗʰ

    1933 Superior School of Fine Arts, Argentina

    1936 Director of the Free Fine Arts School, Villa Maria, Cordoba, Argentina

    1937 Married Emilia Barragan

    1938 Guillermo Abraham Lasansky born

    1939 Director of the Taller Manualidades, Cordoba, Argentina

    1942 Rocio Aitana Lasansky born

    1943 Moved to United States

    1943 Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship

    1944 Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship

    1945 Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship

    1945 Established Print Department in the School of Art and Art History at the University of Iowa.

    1946 Leonardo Lasansky born

    1947 Maria Jimena born

    1952 Became U.S. Citizen

    1953 Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship

    1954 Luis Phillip Lasansky born

    1957 Thomas Lasansky born

    1957 Eyre Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art

    1959 Eyre Medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art

    1959 Honorary Doctor of Arts, Iowa Wesleyan College, Mount Pleasant, IA

    1959 Posada Award, Primera Exposicion Bienal Interamericana de Pintura y Grabado en Mexico, Mexico City

    1964 Awarded Guggenheim Fellowship

    1965 Accadamico Onorario of the Classe de Incisione, Accademia della Arti del Designo, Florence, Italy

    1967 Virgil M. Hancher Distinguished Professor of Art, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA

    1969 Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts, Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, WA

    1974 Dickinson College Arts Award, Carlisle, PA

    1976 The Lasansky Room, an 1800 square foot space dedicated to the permanent display of his prints and drawings, The University of Iowa Museum of Art, Iowa City, IA

    1977 Honorary Doctor of Humanities Degree, Associated Colleges of the Twin Cities, St. Paul, MN

    1978 Citation for Distinguished Service to Art and Education in the Arts, National Association of Schools of Art, Chicago, IL

    1979 Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts, Carleton College, Northfield, MN

    1979 Honored Artist Award, Fourth Latin American Biennial of Graphic Arts, Exposicion Retrospectiva Homenage IV Bienal de Puerto Rico

    1980 Distinguished Teaching of Art Award, The College Art Association of America, New Orleans, LA

    1981 Invited and Installed as an Associate Member of the National Academy of Arts and Design, New York, NY

    1982 Printmaker Professor Emeritus, The Southern Graphics Council Association, Tulsa, OK

    1982 Nominated for the Wolf Foundation Award in the Arts, Dr. Ricardo Subirana Lobo Wolf Foundation, Jerusalem, Israel

    1983 Honorary Award from the Arts and Humanities Commission for the Aging, by decree of the Governor of Iowa, the Honorable Robert D. Ray

    1984 Named Virgil M. Hancher Professor Emeritus, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA

    1985 Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts, Coe College, Cedar Rapids, IA

    1988 Named Academico Correspondiente in the United States, De la Academia Nacional de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires, Argentina

    1989 Selected and Installed as a Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN

    1989 Dedication of the Lasansky Wing, a 5000 square foot space dedicated to the permanent display of his prints and drawings, Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, IA

    1990 Honorary Award for Outstanding Achievement in the Arts, from the Iowa Arts Council, by decree of the Governor of the State of Iowa, the Honorable Terry E. Bransted, and Iowa Arts Council Board, Des Moines, IA

    1990 Installed as an Academician of the National Academy of Arts and Design, New York

    1991 Nominated by the Governor of the State of Iowa, the Honorable Terry E. Bransted, for the National Governors' Association Distinguished Service Award for artistic production, Seattle, WA

    1991 Awarded the Certificate of Recognition by the Governor of the State of Iowa, the Honorable Terry E. Bransted, for Distinguished Service to the State of Iowa, Des Moines, IA

    1999 Presented The Iowa Award, the fourteenth recipient of the State's Highest Citizen Honor, presented by the Governor of the State of Iowa, the Honorable Thomas J. Vilsack, and the Iowa Centennial Memorial Foundation, Iowa City, IA

    2001 Presented the Distinguished Faculty/Staff Award, granted to retired or former UI Faculty/Staff in recognition of significant achievement or specific meritorious service on behalf of the quality and advancement of the University; the first non-administrator to receive the award, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA

    2001 Presented the Title of Honorary Artist Member of The Los Angeles Society of Printmakers for the Distinguished Body of Work and Lifelong Contribution to the Field of Printmaking, The First Person so Honored by The Society, Los Angeles, CA

    2012 Passed away in Iowa City, IA, April 2ⁿᵈ (aged 97)

  • Mauricio Lasansky has had over 250 one-man shows in the United States and 35 countries. His works can be seen in over 140 museums and public collections in the United States, Argentina, Colombia, England, France, Germany, Italy, Mexico, Poland, Portugal, Slovenia, Spain, and other countries.


Biography

Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Mauricio Lasansky is one of the few modern artists who have limited their works almost exclusively to the graphic media. Due to his early contributions in the development of graphic techniques and his dedication to printmaking, Lasansky is considered to be a forerunner in the evolution of the graphic arts as a critical art form and has become recognized as one of the "Fathers of 20th Century American Printmaking."

In 1936, at the age of twenty-two, he had already become the director of the Free Fine Arts School, in Villa Maria, Cordoba, Argentina. In 1943, Lasansky was offered the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship in which he came to the United States and studied the print collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This opportunity not only afforded him a wealth of knowledge about prints and printmakers but created an opportunity for him to be exposed to and work with a number of European masters who had fled to the United States during wartimes. By 1952, he had not only received a great deal of recognition, prizes and awards, and had an impressive line of exhibitions, but also had established himself as an American citizen.

During the 1940's, the interest in printmaking as a fine art was revitalized by the Works Progress Administration graphic arts workshops and many artists continued to explore the method after the WPA projects were discontinued. The most important of these studios was the New York Atelier 17 established by Stanley William Hayter. His was the first independent American workshop developed for exclusive experimentation of the intaglio process of printmaking. Through Hayter's efforts, the studio gained the attention of artists from around the country. Many of these artists are now referred to as the New York School. These artists adopted Abstract Expressionism as a means of stylistic expression and their work radically altered the course of intaglio printmaking in America.

Many artists, including Lasansky, worked extensively at the Atelier 17 formulating new methods and creating new techniques for their subjects as well as their prints. Several were later invited to develop print-shops in university art departments around the country. One of the first artists to accept this challenge was Mauricio Lasansky. He established the vital printmaking workshop at the University of Iowa. To this day, it serves as a model for numerous other university printmaking departments led by many of Lasansky's former students.

It is the passing down of established techniques and ideologies about innovative printmaking techniques from generations of these teachers and students that marks the legacy of Atelier 17. And, it is Lasansky, one of the first generations of these printmakers, who has influenced the course of printmaking in the United States.

Best known for large scale prints in which he uses multiple plates and full ranges of color, Lasansky combines a spectrum of graphic techniques including etching, drypoint, aquatint and engraving. Throughout his stylistic evolution, he has created eloquent figural statements that are colorful, fresh and spontaneous. His early and late works show that his imagery has consistently dealt with elements which have undergone change and expansion as the work was created. Therefore, the subject of his art is as important as the technical aspect of his printmaking.

Lasansky's portraits appear as humanistic ideals when compared to the dehumanized figures that appear in his other prints. Many of his portraits begin in an individual format, but many times the idealized figure degenerates and is presented in graphic rather than pictorial space. He has a special regard for the spectator, as he portrays the image within the viewer's space.

Lasansky has devoted himself to exploring the expressive possibilities of graphic arts. He has amassed a body of prints considered to be some of the most powerful and impressive in contemporary art. He has contributed significantly in establishing printmaking as a meaningful and critical art form of the 20th century. And, as a result, he has become one of the first in a generation of important printmakers to teach scores of students, who in turn are teaching scores of future generations in this country. For all these reasons, he is considered to be one of the "Fathers of 20th Century American Printmaking."

Lasansky has been the recipient of a total of five Guggenheim Fellowships, six honorary Doctorate of Arts degrees and numerous prizes and special honors. His work is represented in more than one hundred public collections including virtually every major museum in the United States. Internationally recognized, he has been exhibited throughout North and South America, Europe and Russia. Now retired from the University of Iowa, he continues to be an inspiration to artists for his contributions, his richly and intensely printed surfaces, and his highly personal style.