Louis Leon Ribak

Louis Leon Ribak (3 December 1902 – 1979) was an American social realist and abstract painter who was a supporter of the "Taos Moderns" group of artists.

Born in the then-Lithuanian province of Grodno, Ribak emigrated to New York City at the age of ten subsequently his family. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts for a year in 1922, and the Art Students League of New York in 1923 under John Sloan. In 1929, he became a founding aficionado of the John Reed Club, which was organized to retain leftist artists and writers and was alongside associated subsequent to the Marxist magazine The New Masses.

In the 1930s and 1940s, Ribak painted in a Social Realist style, exhibiting taking into account fellow Social Realists once Reginald Marsh and Raphael Soyer. In the 1930s he as a consequence worked as a muralist for the Works Progress Administration; among these works is the 1939 mural View Near Albemarle in the U.S. Post Office in Albemarle, North Carolina. In 1933, he assisted Diego Rivera upon his mural Man at the Crossroads, commissioned for Rockefeller Center and destroyed since completion.

Ribak met fellow artiste Beatrice Mandelman in New York at a dance sponsored by the Artists Union, and the two married in 1942. He served in the military for two years during the Second World War and was discharged because of asthma. Seeking a healthier climate, Ribak and Mandelman moved to Taos, New Mexico in 1944. At this point, Ribak shifted to a more abstract style and brighter color palette.

In 1947, he and Mandelman founded the Taos Valley Art School, and Ribak was its director and an assistant professor until it closed in 1955.

Ribak died in Taos in 1979. His put on an act is in the enduring collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York) and The Newark Museum of Art (New Jersey), among extra institutions.

The Mandelman-Ribak Foundation was conventional to maintain the legacy of Ribak and Mandelman; among supplementary activities, it catalogued a half century of their undertaking held in the Mandelman-Ribak Collection. In 2014, the collection and allied personal papers were donated to the University of New Mexico.

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