Westwood Gallery NYC
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Art Fairs
  • Research & Projects
  • Publications
  • News
  • Press
  • About
Menu

Boris Lurie: Life After Death

Past exhibition
3 Jan - 18 Feb 2017
  • Overview
  • Artworks
  • Installation Views
  • Press release
  • Press
  • Publications
Overview
Boris Lurie NO Posters Mounted, 1963 offset printing on wastepaper mounted on canvas 87 x 68 in. 221 x 172.7 cm
Boris Lurie
NO Posters Mounted, 1963
offset printing on wastepaper mounted on canvas
87 x 68 in.
221 x 172.7 cm

WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC in collaboration with Boris Lurie Art Foundation presents an exhibition of paintings, collage and sculpture by Boris Lurie (1924-2008), co-founder of the NO!art movement. In 2010 the gallery exhibited Boris’ early work, the first solo exhibition after the artist’s death. The current exhibition comprises a curated selection by James Cavello of over 60 works of art from the 1950s to 1970s.

​

Each decade of Boris Lurie’s life as an artist represented hard-hitting expression and a creative cathartic journey. After surviving the horrors of the Holocaust, including four different concentration camps from 1941-45 and the murder of his mother, sister, and grandmother, Boris and his father immigrated to New York City in 1946. The 22 year-old Boris immersed himself in his art and became a disruptor of norms.

​

Boris’ early 1950s paintings on dark backgrounds are reminiscent of German Expressionism with disproportionate, sometimes deformed fading images of women. On exhibit are four large paintings with groupings of two and three women. The female image was symbolic of life, family, death, sexuality and objectification. Boris’ 1960s collages using pin-ups from ‘girlie’ magazines were startlingly incorporated into Holocaust photographs. The shock of the combination of images stemmed from Boris’ malevolence and art purge of crimes against humanity.

​

As his frustration with the art world grew due to the focus on Abstract Expressionists and later Pop art, Boris co-founded the underground NO!art movement in 1959 with fellow artists Sam Goodman (1919-1967) and Stanley Fisher (1926-1980). In the exhibition are paintings and collage reflecting the anti-establishment attitude and Boris’ free form expression without commercial motivation. They encompass the artist’s views on politics, society, art, personal experiences and visceral expression. At the time, NO!art was largely rejected by art critics, museums and collectors, until the artists and artwork of NO!art became more understood in the historical context.

​

Also included in the exhibition are a series of 1963 collages fixated on altered images of the establishment male in a tie with faces painted over (‘Cabot Lodge’), as well as 1970s assemblages, such as the Star of David in hand-formed cement attached to rope, cement lettered NO!art bras, corset and a set of painted Israeli flags. All are symbolic of Boris’ intrinsic language. The assemblage sculptures allowed him to form media using his hands, but never to capitulate to art market sculptural commerce.

 

 

 

​

​

Boris Lurie’s work will also be on view in the exhibition, Inventing Downtown: Artist-Run Galleries in New York, 1952-1965 at Grey Art Gallery, NYU, January 10- April 1, 2017. Boris’ artwork has been exhibited recently at Jewish Museum New York, Jewish Museum Berlin, Janco Dada Museum Israel, as well as galleries and museums in France, Russia, Spain, Italy, Germany, Washington DC, Indiana, Boston, Los Angeles and New York.

​

WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with essay by Robert C. Morgan.

The Boris Lurie Art Foundation is dedicated to preserving and exhibiting the artwork of Boris Lurie and NO!art artists.

Images © 2016 Boris Lurie Art Foundation

Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Artworks
  • Installation view from the side of three tridimensional paintings of interconnected trapezoidal shapes in vivid colors with a black tridimensional painting in the background
    Boris Lurie, NO Posters Mounted, 1963
  • Mixed media artwork collage from newspaper cutouts and vintage pinup images on a brown background
    Boris Lurie, Torn Pinups, 1962-1963
  • Mixed media artwork collage from newspaper, magazine cutouts, vintage pin up images, and the word NO multiple times
    Boris Lurie, Big NO Painting, 1963
  • Burlap bag with pin up images in paper collage, a yellow Star of David, and the text “BORIS LURIE/NO ART BAG” in red and black oil paint
    Boris Lurie, NO!art Bag, 1974
  • Paper collage with vintage pin up image overlaid with “S(L)AVE” in black letters
    Boris Lurie, Save (Slave), 1962-73
  • Four cement blocks in the shape of a Star of David connected by rope
    Boris Lurie, Rope and Stars of David, circa 1973
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie with face covered over in paint, gray and blue background
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie with face scratched over, yellow background
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photo (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie overpainted with blue with a red kiss mark on the mouth
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie painted over with white, red, black, with red kiss mark
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Stylized, distorted nude on green background, looks like Venus of Willendorf
    Boris Lurie, Dismembered Woman: Nude, Stepping, circa 1955
  • Stylized image of a sitting nude woman wearing a hat and high heels, on green background
    Boris Lurie, Dismembered Woman: The Stripper, 1955
  • Stylized image of the legs of a woman wearing platform shoes with high heels, on green background
    Boris Lurie, Dismembered Woman, circa 1955
  • Semi-abstract painting of a bust figure, red, blue, yellow background
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie with face scratched over, blue background, red dripping surface at the top
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photo (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Mixed media collage with central vintage pin up image on a green and red background
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Deliberate Pinup), circa 1975
  • Ink painting on canvas of a nude woman outlined in blue on a pink background
    Boris Lurie, Dismembered Women: Pinup, Unartistically Posed, circa 1957
  • Ink painting on canvas of a partially abstracted woman in profile shaded in gray on a pink background
    Boris Lurie, Dismembered Women: Model, circa 1957
  • Mixed media collage of magazine cutouts, vintage pin up images, and the word NO multiple times, white background
    Boris Lurie, NO (Baby Lotion), circa 1964
  • Oil painting on canvas with a black and white photo of two nude women in the center, red and brown background
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Shame!), 1963
  • Blue lace longline bra with cement blocks in the shape of letters N & O on the cups
    Boris Lurie, NO Bra (NOs cast in cement), 1972
  • White lace bra with cement blocks in the shape of letters N & O hanging from the cups
    Boris Lurie, NO Bra (NOs cast in cement), 1972
  • Green, red painted corset with yellow Star of David and Star of David cement block dangling on chains below
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Corset with Stars of David), 1982
  • Paper collage of vintage pin up images on a white background, with text “PISS” in red overlaid
    Boris Lurie, PISS, circa 1973
  • Mixed media collage with vintage pin up image next to a black square with text “IN” in red
    Boris Lurie, IN, circa 1973
  • Paper collage and paint on shaped cardboard artwork with vintage pin up image and text “NO” on red background
    Boris Lurie, NO, 1963
  • Paint on plywood artwork of a skull and crossbones and border in red with text “NO” multiple times in black
    Boris Lurie, NOs with Skull and Crossbones, 1961
  • Paper collage of Holocaust image and tape forming text “LOAD” in violet on white background
    Boris Lurie, Hard Writings (LOAD), 1972
  • Paper collage of vintage pin up images and images of children and family on a black background
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Suzy Sweet), 1963
  • Paper collage with sand over a photograph of a woman in black fetish clothing holding a flogger, white background
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Deliberate pinup series), circa 1975
  • Mixed media collage with faces and the word “NO” multiple times on a blue, white, red background
    Boris Lurie, NO poster Overpainted, 1963
  • Five cloth Israel flags with yellow Star of David shapes painted on them, mounted on foamboard
    Boris Lurie, Altered Israeli Flags with Star of David, 1974
  • Mixed media collage of vintage pin up images, blue background
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Torn Pinups), circa 1962
  • The word NO in red paint on a black, orange background
    Boris Lurie, Feeling Painting NO with Red and Black, 1963
  • Mixed media collage of vintage pin up images, covered halfway diagonally with black paint overlaid with the word “NO” in orange
    Boris Lurie, NO with Pinups and Shadow (Large NO Painting), 1958
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie with face covered over in paint, gray and yellow background
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Pinups collaged with newspaper cuttings on blue background and the word “NO” painted on top multiple times
    Boris Lurie, NO Poster, 1963
  • Mixed media collage of blue and green material with the words 'NO' and and 'SOLD OUT' overlaid
    Boris Lurie, NO Poster, 1963
  • Large blue pinup collaged with newspaper cuttings on blue background and the word “NO” painted on top multiple times
    Boris Lurie, NO Poster, 1963
  • Painting of male bust portrait in suit and tie with face scratched over, brown background
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos (Cabot Lodge), 1963
  • Cardboard box with paper collage, painted Star of David, and chains
    Boris Lurie, Untitled, early 1970s
  • Painting of a distorted pink figure on a red background with the word “NO” in black, green, orange multiple times
    Boris Lurie, Relief: Stripper with NOs, 1958-62
  • The word NO in orange, white, and blue paint on a black background
    Boris Lurie, NO on Plastic, 1966-69
  • The word NO collaged in orange paper over a gray background which looks like old linoleum tiles
    Boris Lurie, NO with Linoleum, 1962
  • White painted canvas with the word NO scratched into the surface
    Boris Lurie, Silver NO, 1962
  • White painted canvas with the word NO scratched into the surface
    Boris Lurie, Silver NO, 1962
  • Vinyl record painted orange with the word NO in black mounted on board
    Boris Lurie, NO Record, 1962
  • Square cardboard painted yellow with the word NO cut out of it 3 times and scribbled over in ink
    Boris Lurie, Yellow NO Cutouts, 1962
  • Collage of torn paper forming the word NO in white on a yellow background
    Boris Lurie, NO with torn papers, 1963
  • Collage of the word NO from corrugated cardboard over a light gray background
    Boris Lurie, NO Stencil, 1963
  • Pin-up collage of three assembled images with the word 'NO' overlaid
    Boris Lurie, NO on Reversed Pinups, 1972
  • Paper collage of a black and white photograph of a nude woman in the center of a white background, with the word NO overlaid in black
    Boris Lurie, No on Pinup, 1971-72
  • Pinup collage on white background with the word NO in black paint brushstrokes
    Boris Lurie, NO on Reversed Pinups, 1971-72
  • Expressionistic painting in beige and black of three women
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Three Women #2), circa 1955
  • Painting in black oil paint on unprimed canvas of three standing women
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Three Women), 1957
  • Black and white mixed media collage and oil painting of three abstracted women in front of a geometric background
    Boris Lurie, Untitled (Three Women #1), 1958-59
  • Green toned photograph of a nude woman printed on canvas and highlighted with paint
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos Pinup (Drawn Head), circa 1963
  • Black and white photograph of nude woman altered with acrylic paint
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photo: Pinup (Body), c. 1963
  • Painting on canvas of a stylized nude woman, faceless, painted in white, grays, black
    Boris Lurie, Altered Photos: Pinup (Dismembered figure), circa 1963
  • Black and white oil painting of distorted figures on canvas
    Boris Lurie, Untitled, 1955-58
Installation Views
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
  • Installation view of 2017 exhibition, Boris Lurie: Life After Death, at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Boris Lurie: Life After Death | Installation View
Press release

WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC in collaboration with Boris Lurie Art Foundation presented an exhibition of paintings, collage and sculpture by Boris Lurie (1924-2008), co-founder of the NO!art movement. In 2010 the gallery exhibited Boris’ early work, the first solo exhibition after the artist’s death. This exhibition comprised a curated selection by James Cavello of over 60 works of art from the 1950s to 1970s.

​

Each decade of Boris Lurie’s life as an artist represented hard-hitting expression and a creative cathartic journey. After surviving the horrors of the Holocaust, including four different concentration camps from 1941-45 and the murder of his mother, sister, and grandmother, Boris and his father immigrated to New York City in 1946. The 22 year-old Boris immersed himself in his art and became a disruptor of norms.

​

Boris’ early 1950s paintings on dark backgrounds are reminiscent of German Expressionism with disproportionate, sometimes deformed fading images of women. On exhibit are four large paintings with groupings of two and three women. The female image was symbolic of life, family, death, sexuality and objectification. Boris’ 1960s collages using pin-ups from ‘girlie’ magazines were startlingly incorporated into Holocaust photographs. The shock of the combination of images stemmed from Boris’ malevolence and art purge of crimes against humanity.

​

As his frustration with the art world grew due to the focus on Abstract Expressionists and later Pop art, Boris co-founded the underground NO!art movement in 1959 with fellow artists Sam Goodman (1919-1967) and Stanley Fisher (1926-1980). In the exhibition are paintings and collage reflecting the anti-establishment attitude and Boris’ free form expression without commercial motivation. They encompass the artist’s views on politics, society, art, personal experiences and visceral expression. At the time, NO!art was largely rejected by art critics, museums and collectors, until the artists and artwork of NO!art became more understood in the historical context.

​

Also included in the exhibition are a series of 1963 collages fixated on altered images of the establishment male in a tie with faces painted over (‘Cabot Lodge’), as well as 1970s assemblages, such as the Star of David in hand-formed cement attached to rope, cement lettered NO!art bras, corset and a set of painted Israeli flags. All are symbolic of Boris’ intrinsic language. The assemblage sculptures allowed him to form media using his hands, but never to capitulate to art market sculptural commerce.

 

Boris Lurie’s work was concurrently on view in the exhibition, Inventing Downtown: Artist-Run Galleries in New York, 1952-1965 at Grey Art Gallery, NYU, January 10 - April 1, 2017. Boris’ artwork has been exhibited recently at Jewish Museum New York, Jewish Museum Berlin, Janco Dada Museum Israel, as well as galleries and museums in France, Russia, Spain, Italy, Germany, Washington DC, Indiana, Boston, Los Angeles and New York.

​

WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with essay by Robert C. Morgan.

 

The Boris Lurie Art Foundation is dedicated to preserving and exhibiting the artwork of Boris Lurie and NO!art artists.

Press
  • The Week in Art: Opening Reception for Boris Lurie: Life After Death at Westwood Gallery

    Sarah Cascone, Artnet News, 14 Jan 2017
Publications
  • Boris Lurie

    Boris Lurie

    Life After Death 2017
    Hardcover 136 pages
    Publisher: Westwood Gallery NYC
    ISBN: 978-0-9655834-1-1
    Dimensions: 10 x 8 inches | 25.4 x 20.3 cm
    Read more

Related artist

  • Click to view more information about artist Boris Lurie

    Boris Lurie

Back to exhibitions
Privacy Policy
Accessibility Policy
Manage cookies
© 2025 Westwood Gallery NYC
Site by Artlogic
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Artnet, opens in a new tab.

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences