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Adolf Dehn
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30 October 2023

Adolf Dehn (1895–1968), American painter in multimedia and acclaimed master lithographer, left his Minnesota hometown after formal training at the Minneapolis Art Institute to study at the Art Students League in New York. He toured Europe in the early 1920s, quickly acclimating to the continental lifestyle and adeptly depicting its nuances and idiosyncrasies with prolific lithographs and sketches. His critical and satirical renderings of the political movements, social conventions, and governmental policies in post-World War I Europe during "Le Crazy Years" gave the Midwestern artist ample material for his growing body of work.
Sailing back to the United States in 1929, Dehn survived the Great Depression with commercial artwork and contributions to popular magazines such as The New Yorker, Vogue, and Vanity Fair. His clever drawings that reflected the Jazz Age's culture and fashionable society made him a favorite of Frank Crowninshield, Vanity Fair's renowned editor.
During this time, while Dehn captured the heyday of Manhattan's burlesque theaters, lively Harlem nightclubs, impressive skyline, and busy harbor, he was continuously drawn to Central Park—his predilection for the city's magnificent green space was a sustaining source of inspiration and subject matter. Adolf Dehn: Midcentury Manhattan candidly examines the life and work of this exceptional, adventurous, and intrepid artist as he moved skillfully and capably between lithography, ink-wash drawings, gouache, casein painting, and watercolors. Combining numerous vintage photographs with newly discovered, Manhattan-inspired prints and drawings from the collections of, among others, the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA, and The Metropolitan Mesuem of Art, Adolf Dehn: Midcentury Manhattan traces how Dehn's art reflected the spirit, pulse, and uniquely American tonalities of The City of Dreams.
Philip Eliasoph, PhD, is an art historian in Fairfield University's Visual & Performing Arts department and the author of numerous scholarly books, catalogues, articles, and reviews. He was recently appointed to be special assistant to the president for arts and culture. In 2016, he was invited to design and curate a weekly Arts & Visual Culture blog for the New York Times international education platform. he is also an elected member of the Association Internationale des Critiques d'Art, UNESCO's art critic organization based in Paris.
Henry Adams, PhD, is the Ruth Coulter Heede Professor of Art History at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of 14 art-related books and catalogues, as well as hundreds of articles on art and artists. he has also served as the curator of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art and the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Foreword
Philip Eliasoph and Adolf Dehn
Adolf Dehn's Manhattan: Rhapsody in Blue
- Chapter I
1941: The Axis Spins—A Life of Art - Chapter II
Waterville, Minneapolis, Guardhouse Prison: Career versus Conscience - Chapter III
Dangerous Girls: Expatriate Pleasures—"Le Crazy Years" - Chapter IV
From the Crash to the A-Bomb: Art & the Politics of Culture - Chapter V
Life's Rita Hayworth, Cover Girl, and Adolf Dehn inside: An American Pictorial - Chapter VI
Caricature & Satire: "Babes" of Burlesque, High-Society Babbitts, Jitterbugging in Harlem - Chapter VII
Central Park: Nature's Urban Canvas - Chapter VIII
Rhapsody in Blue: Subway, Skyscraper, Skyline - Chapter IX
"So We Beat On"
Plates
Paintings and Drawings
Prints
Acknowledgments
Chronology
Collections
Exhibitions, 1915–2017
Selected Bibliography
Photography Credits
Index