Michael Lenson

Michael Lenson (February 21, 1903 – June 9, 1971) has gained widespread nod as one of America's most important realist painters. Who Was Who in American Art called him "New Jersey's most important muralist." He is valued for his facility as a draftsman and the technique he achieved by near study of the Old Masters.

Michael Lenson was born as Michael Levenson in Galich, Russia, on February 21, 1903, and emigrated to the United States in 1911. He studied at the National Academy of Design, where he won the $10,000 Chalonier Paris Prize in 1928, which supported four years of additional studies in Europe: at the Slade School of Art in London, the Academie des Beaux Arts in Paris, and in the Netherlands.

He returned from Europe to twist an inhospitable art publicize during the Great Depression. He told an interviewer years later: "I was no more a conquering hero, I came support to nothing." He applied for doing with the New York chapter of the Works Progress Administration (WPA), but was rejected because he exceeded the income requirement since one of his brothers was a doctor and the intimates owned a ascetic cleaning business. In 1936 he reapplied successfully in New Jersey by not admitting to any associates sources of support. He rose to become partner in crime state commissioner of mural projects for the WPA in New Jersey. He completed several major murals and he supervised a dozen more by further artists. He stayed taking into consideration the WPA until the program done in 1943.

His remaining murals, all in Newark, include: "History of the Enlightenment of Man" at Weequahic High School; "History of Newark" in the council chambers at Newark City Hall; and "The Four Freedoms", at the Fourteenth Avenue School. Another mural, "Mining", is in a say office in Mount Hope, West Virginia. Three others were destroyed: "The History of New Jersey", a 16-by-75-foot mural at the Essex Mountain Sanatorium in Verona, was destroyed during renovations; murals for the New Jersey Pavilion of the 1939 World's Fair and for the Charlton Street School in Newark were aimless to demolition.

In 1941 he bought a home in Nutley, New Jersey, and in 1945 he married June Rollar.

Lenson exhibited at several New York City galleries, including Bonestell Gallery in 1947, Kende Gallery in 1951, and Cober Gallery in 1962. A New York Times review said:

He painted in oil after 1950, adapting his earlier surrealist elements to the socialist truth of his younger years. "Where Are We Now?" (1955) protested adjacent to nuclear proliferation in a way both emotional and political. One critic described his well ahead works as "sometimes difficult to entrance because they're appropriately visually intricate" but are still perfect representatives of the politically engaged art of the Cold War years.

He painted and exhibited extensively until his death in 1971.

Lenson wrote a weekly column for the Newark Sunday News, "The Realm of Art," from 1956 to 1971. It made him, according to art historian William Gerdts, "New Jersey's most distinguished art critic". He taught at the Rutgers Extension School and Montclair Art Museum, which acquired many of his works upon his death. He testified back a running committee in 1969 to urge increased funding for public libraries in a room festooned with his own murals.

The Montclair Art Museum mounted a retrospective of his career in 1970. Still a resident of Nutley, Lenson died in Orange, New Jersey, on June 9, 1971, at the age of 68.

His works are in the collections of the RISD Museum, the Maier Museum of Art, the Johnson Museum at Cornell, the Newark Museum, the Montclair Art Museum, the Wolfsonian Collection, and many others.

TheButler Institute of American Art in Ohio presented a one-man retrospective exhibition of paintings and drawings by Lenson, "Time, Place and Substance", in 2012–2013.

One of his brothers was the humorist Sam Levenson. His son is David Lenson, a professor in the Comparative Literature department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the author of On Drugs.

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