Irving Norman
and His World of Social Surrealism
Dark Metropolis Irving Norman's Social Surrealism
Crocker Art Museum and the Irving Norman Trust
Editied by Ray Day and Scott A. Shields
223 pages (12 x 9 inches), with 154 color plates
With essays by Michael Duncan, Charles C. Eldredge, Patricia Junker and Scott A. Shields
An émégre from Russian held Vilnius, Lithuania who survived World War 1 as a child and witnessed the atrocities as a machine gunner for the Abraham Lincoln Brigade in the Spanish Civil War, Irving Norman (1906-1989) painted with a dark vision at once personal and prophetic. Writing in Art in America, Michael Duncan described his paintings as "jaw-droppingly effective social indictments that would have been endorsed by Orwell and Huxley. The unrestrained passion and monumental energy of this work blows most contemporary political art out of the water."
Norman's massive canvases abound with teeming figures, drone-like and mechanical in their repetition, yet stubbornly and hauntingly human. The combination of jewel-tone colors, transcendent messages, and technical virtuosity make his work unique in the history of American Art.
For more information contact Ray Day (415) 730 - 3670 or
The film is finally finished ! It is 62 minutes long and I'm in the process of entering it into festivals, finally getting his work seen...hopefully. Here is a link to the trailer: https://vimeo.com/281793469
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