New York City By Martin Lewis: In The 1930s An Australian Emigree Captured The Essence Of The City – Design You Trust — Design Daily Since 2007

New York City By Martin Lewis: In The 1930s An Australian Emigree Captured The Essence Of The City

Martin Lewis (7 June 1881 – 1962), the Australian-born American printmakers and artist, is best known for his etchings of New York City. Martin captured the city’s human bustle and brooding architectural menace. We see busy people in sullen places dressed in light and shade.

h/t: flashbak

The air tingles at the sense of acute urban loneliness in his etching of a woman darting down into an otherwise empty Subway late one night. You get a sense of human isolation and failure among the thrusting, soaring New York of the planners’ dreams.

During the onset of the Great Depression in the early 1930s, artists found working in a treacherous financial climate in the already expensive New York City, a lifestyle hard to maintain. This necessitated Lewis’s move, somewhat reluctantly, to Sandy Hook, rural Connecticut in 1932. Here, he concentrated on painting pastoral landscapes in a departure from his previously celebrated urban subject. He also produced small-town drypoint printed scenes. His paintings, expressionist in style and with much greater consideration for nature as predominant, reflected his surroundings, but were not favoured by collectors.

For by the time of his death in 1962, Martin Lewis was all but forgotten by a world that had once embraced and celebrated the mastery of his craft…



























If you want more awesome content, subscribe to 'Design You Trust Facebook page. You won't be disappointed.

More Inspiring Stories

Traveler Leaves Hilarious Graffiti Hidden For Hotel Guests In Rooms He Has Stayed In Over The Last 11 Years
Body Painting Illusions – The Latest Creations Of Hikaru Cho
Legotypes: This Artist Creates Famous Brand Logos Out Of LEGO Bricks
Creepy and Naughty: The Scary Hotties by The Tragic Girls
Russian Fans Of J. K. Rowling Make Pastries Based On "Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them"
Kawaii, Fetish, Bizarre, Cruel: The Art Of GENk
This Artist Gives Animals A Rainbow Makeover
Artist Illustrates Monsters Coming Out Of People’s Phones Because We Stare At Them Too Much
Nightmarish Illustrations That Will Have You Hiding Under The Bed
With Fire On Their Blades: The Dark Fantasy Character Art Of Eve Ventrue
Philippine Map Made of Lego
15 Hilarious Photos That Were Made Instantly Better By Photoshop Masters
"The Never Remembered": The Superb Surreal Melted Portraits of Pop Icons by Anthony Rondinone
Artist Comes Up With Genius Way To Use Puzzles, Sells The Result For Up To $650
Awesome Star Wars Fan Art By Tsuneo Sanda, Official Lucasfilm & Disney Artist
Here’s What Famous Historical Figures Would Look Like Today
Tips That Will Help Designers Translate Client-Speak Like A Pro
One-Panel Comics Filled With Absurd Situations And Silly Humor By Tom Falco
Beneath the Veil: The Psychedelic Art Works of Richard Ingersoll
Go Outside Magazine - Jailhouses
Humorous Comic Fat Lady Postcards by Donald McGill From the Early 20th Century
Hilarious Private Conversations People Overheard In San Francisco
An Adventure In Unknowing: Totally Amazing Illustrations By Sylvain Sarrailh
11 Tips For Housewives Trying To Be Sexy In The 1930s