Marvin Lazarus: Painters & Sculptors of the 1950s–1960s, on view at Deborah Bell Photographs from January 15 to February 28, presents a compelling portrait of the postwar art world through the discerning eye of Marvin Lazarus. Working quietly during a decade of intense artistic transformation, Lazarus created an extraordinary photographic record of painters and sculptors whose work reshaped modern art. His images capture a moment when abstraction, experimentation, and personal vision converged to redefine cultural expression in the United States and beyond.
Lazarus’s portraits are notable for their restraint and intimacy. Rather than staging dramatic scenes, he photographed artists in their studios, homes, or familiar environments, allowing personality and presence to emerge naturally. The resulting images convey concentration, vulnerability, and resolve, offering a human counterpoint to the monumental reputations many of these figures would later acquire. Painters and sculptors appear not as distant icons, but as working individuals deeply engaged with their craft.
Spanning the late 1950s and 1960s, the series reflects a period marked by bold aesthetic shifts and cultural confidence. Abstract Expressionism, postwar figuration, and emerging sculptural practices all find representation through Lazarus’s lens. His photographs suggest the diversity of approaches that coexisted at the time, from explosive gestural painting to quieter, more contemplative forms. Together, they form a visual map of an era defined by both experimentation and conviction.
What distinguishes Lazarus’s work is his sensitivity to the creative atmosphere surrounding his subjects. The portraits are less about fame than about process, focus, and artistic identity. Subtle details—a gesture, a posture, a glance—hint at the inner lives of artists navigating a rapidly changing art world. In this way, the photographs function as both historical documents and deeply personal observations.
Presented today,
Painters & Sculptors of the 1950s–1960s invites viewers to reconsider a foundational period in modern art through a body of work that values quiet observation over spectacle. At Deborah Bell Photographs, Lazarus’s images offer a thoughtful and enduring tribute to the artists who shaped the visual language of the twentieth century.
Images:
Marvin Lazarus. Marcel Duchamp, 1955, Photo_MDPortraits2_no.095 © Marvin Lazarus, courtesy Association Marcel Duchamp