Leonard Baskin, Isaac

Leonard Baskin
Isak

Leonard Baskin, (1922-2000) American sculptor, graphic artist and printmaker, was strongly influenced by the Old Testament, Sumerian and Egyptian art. According to Baskin a work of art was the result of a clash between the material and the vitality and force of the motive. In his sculptures, he wanted to keep as much as possible of the original stone block, so that they would rest better in space and gain in expressive power. Dignity, humanity and an ability to express what was inside through the sculpture’s outside became Baskin’s hallmarks as a sculptor. His sculptures were always figurative, many of them self-portraits because he meant that the foundation of sculpture lies in the human form. The exploration of the human body he compares to a search for the image of man – who in spite of his wretchedness still is a magnificent creature.

Isaac (bronze 1973 purchased 1976) portrays Isaac from The Old Testament as an old man. Sitting on a throne with a ram in his lap he is perhaps remembering the time his father Abraham came close to sacrificing his son.