David Margolis | |
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David Margolis, from the Archives of American Art |
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Born | 1911 |
Died | 2005 (aged 93–94) New York City |
Nationality | American |
Field | Painting, murals |
Works | Materials of Relaxation |
Influenced by | Willem de Kooning |
Awards | Special Recognition Award for WPA murals, Public Design Commission of the City of New York |
David Margolis (died July 17, 2005) was an American artist known for his WPA murals in New York City.
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Margolis is best known for his fresco mural in the entrance rotunda of Bellevue Hospital Center. He worked with two other painters, earning $26.50 per week.[1]
I was painting in a place of distress. All around me, it was like it is today. So many people, so much drama. Life, death. Crying, screaming and also laughing. And in the middle I was painting murals that told the story of human progress. Nature. Agriculture. Industry. And the central panels by the doorway representing Construction, Destruction and Reconstruction. Remember, it was the Depression."
Margolis enjoyed evenings at the Savoy Ballroom with abstract expressionist Willem de Kooning,[2] and helped Diego Rivera install his murals at Rockefeller Center.[1] He was a member of the Brooklyn Society of Artists [3] and the Federal Art Project. In 1995, Margolis received a Design Award from the Public Design Commission of New York City for his murals painted for the WPA.[4]
His brother was Boris Margo.[5] He married Judith Margolis. In 2000, he protested the demolition of the Poe house by New York University.[6]