Untitled (Personnage), 1976
Color wax crayon and pastel on paper
73 x 58 cm
Personnage, 1962
Oil on canvas
152 x 152 cm
60 x 60 inches
Untitled, 1967
Acrylic on canvas
61 x 50 cm
24,02 x 19,69 inches
Untitled, From the Napoleon Series, 1974
Colored crayon on museum board
101,6 x 76,2 cm
40 x 30 inches
Untitled, From the Napoleon Series, 1974
Colored crayon on museum board
101,6 x 76,2 cm
40 x 30 inches
Personnage, 1962
Oil on canvas
127 x 127 cm
50 x 50 inches
Personnage, 1966
Black ink and watercolor on paper
14,61 x 22,86 cm
5 3/4 x 9 inches
Personnage, 1966
Black ink and watercolor on paper
14,61 x 22,86 cm
5 3/4 x 9 inches
Personnage, 1966
Black ink and watercolor on paper
14,61 x 22,86 cm
5 3/4 x 9 inches
PINCHAS BURSTEIN, alias “MARYAN”.
Born in Polonia, in 1927 and died in USA, in 1977.
The irony in the images of Maryan coexist with the deepness of his biographical character that guided his entire career. Born in Poland in the previous years before Second World War, he became prisoner in a concentration camp when he was 12 years old, where he lost one of his legs and became orphan. This experience and also the new creations of Dubuffet, Picasso, Karel Appel among others, inspired him to develop a very personal artwork in parallel of the post war artistic movements.
Grotesque in appearance with a kitsch air, Maryan`s style has the characteristics of the vanguards with a unique style involving expressionism, art brut and metaphysical spaces with an exceptional vision, influenced by the artworks of his time, but with a radical and clever view.
In his paintings, the “Personnage” show the “angst” and the pain of loneliness, with gesticulating bodies in theatrical poses that emerge him as a precursor of contemporary painting. Often, the faces he paints, show a grin or scream in a very dramatic expression of human tragedy. However, in the middle of this chaos, he expresses irony and tenderness. His personality and style is related with the traditional black humor of the east countries and the survivors, and also close to Kafka“ in “The Process”, that was illustrated by Maryan in 1953.
His “Truth Paintings” were absolutely autobiographical.
He used to say: “I will be myself in any color I put on the canvas”.
Solo exhibition from November 6, 2013 until February 9, 2014.
Musée d'art et d'histoire du Judaïsme, Paris, France.