Raphael SOYER
1899–1987, Russia/USA

Name Raphael SOYER
Birth 1899, Russia
Died 1987, USA

Russian-born artist Raphael Soyer is best known for his compassionate, naturalistic depictions of urban subjects. His sensitive, penetrating portrayals include a broad range of city dwellers: Bowery bums, dancers, seamstresses, shoppers, office workers and fellow artists. Historically, Soyer is associated with the social realist artists of the 1930s, whose art championed the cause of social justice.
Born in Tombov, Russia in 1899, Soyer emigrated with his family to the United States in 1912. His siblings included a twin brother, Moses, and a brother, Isaac, who became successful artists. After settling with his family in New York City, the young Soyer pursued an art education at Cooper Union from 1914 to 1917, at the National Academy of Design from 1918 to 1922, and intermittently at the Art Students League.
Soyer was referred to as an American scene painter. He is identified as a Social Realist because of his interest in men and women viewed in contemporary settings which included the streets, subways, salons and artists' studios of New York City, although he avoided subjects that were particularly critical of society. He also wrote several books on his life and art.
His brothers Moses Soyer and Isaac Soyer were also painters.
Soyer's earliest work was consciously primitive in manner. Until the late 1920s, he typically used frontal presentations, shallow pictorial space and figures rendered in caricature. Later, he developed a brushy, more gestural style that was tonal rather than coloristic. These early works are reminiscent of the paintings of Edgar Degas.
Soyer's interest in depicting his urban environment was expressed early in his career in works such as Sixth Avenue (ca. 1930-1935, Wadsworth Atheneum). As the Depression continued, the artist turned more and more to subjects directly related to the prevailing economic difficulties. One result of the mass unemployment of the 1930s that caught Soyer's imagination was the new role of independent working women. Hemmed in by the crowd, the self-absorbed women in Office Girls (1936, Whitney Museum of American Art) are shown walking to or from work. Soyer's sympathetic study of unemployed men in Transients (1936, University of Texas) is an example of a less propagandistic social realist work. In addition to paintings, he executed a number of lithographs of Depression scenes.
Soyer developed his subjects from New York City's poorer sections. Unlike the painters of the Ashean School 25 years earlier, Soyer and his contemporaries did not view the city as a picturesque spectacle. Instead, they dwelt on the grim realities of poverty and industrialization. Soyer's work, however, is less issue-oriented than that of fellow social realist artists Philip Evergood and Ben Shahn.
After 1940, Soyer began to concentrate on the subject of women at work or posing in his studio. His technique grew more sketchy during the 1950s, but in his ambitious painting Homage To Eakins (1964-1965, National Portrait Gallery), he rendered the figures in a manner typical of his early work.
Between 1953 and 1955, he edited Reality. He later wrote Painter's Pilgrimage (1962), Homage to Thomas Eakins (1966), Self-Revealment: A Memoir (1969) and Diary of an Artist (1977). In 1967, Soyer was given a retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and his paintings have been displayed at many museums and galleries. He has taught at the Art Students League, the New School and the National Academy of Design in New York City.
Source: www.rogallery.com
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Raphael Soyer was born on December 25, 1899, in Borisoglebsk, Russia, into a large, impoverished Jewish family. Artistic and intellectual pursuits were encouraged by his father, a Hebrew teacher and writer, whose liberal ideas and popularity among students led to trouble with provincial authorities. Denied their Russian residence permit, the Soyers moved to the United States in 1912, finally settling in the Bronx, New York. His twin Moses Soyer, and younger brother, Isaac, eventually became successful artists, but they rarely studied or worked together as adults. Raphael left school at age sixteen to help support the family; he attended free classes at the Cooper Union and the National Academy of Design. Guy Pène du Bois, later his teacher at the Art Students League, recognized the young artist’s promise and introduced him to the dealer Charles Daniel, who gave Soyer his first solo exhibition in 1929. Soyer was already known for his sensitive portrayal of New Yorkers observed near his studio in Manhattan’s Lower East Side when he joined the WPA Federal Art Project. Working primarily in oil and lithography, he also taught at the Art Students League and, along with Moses Soyer, painted murals for the post office in Kingsessing, Pennsylvania. A cofounder of the short-lived Reality magazine, Soyer was an ardent champion of realism while abstract expressionism dominated the American art scene. He died in New York on November 4, 1987.
Source: www.aspireauctions.com