Aba Bayefsky Explained

Aba Bayefsky
Birth Date:7 April 1923
Birth Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Aba Bayefsky (April 7, 1923  - May 5, 2001) was an artist and teacher.

Career

Bayefsky was born to a Jewish family in Toronto, Ontario, the second son of a Russian-born father and a Scottish-born mother.[1] He studied at the Central Technical School. During his teens, he attended classes at the Children's Art Centre of the Art Gallery of Ontario, where he was encouraged by such artists as Arthur Lismer, Erma Sutcliffe, Dorothy Medhurst, and A. Y. Jackson. He later studied at the Académie Julian in Paris.

Bayefsky enlisted in the RCAF in October, 1942, and was made a Flight Lieutenant. He was appointed an Official Second World War artist in December, 1944, assigned to depict airborne operations over north-west Europe. He entered the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp shortly after its liberation and recorded what he saw in sketchbooks (these were destroyed in a fire later).[2] [3]

After the war, he was an instructor at the Ontario College of Art. In 1958, he was made a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and in 1979, he was made a member of the Order of Canada. Throughout the late 1970s and early 1980s, Bayefsky maintained an interest in tattooing and produced a series of portraits of tattooed people from Toronto and Japan.[4] [5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Holocaust art of Aba Bayefsky. Canadian Museum of History. 27 September 2018.
  2. Book: Celinscak, Mark. Distance from the Belsen Heap: Allied Forces and the Liberation of a Concentration Camp. 2015. University of Toronto Press. Toronto. 9781442615700.
  3. Book: Murray . Joan . Canadian Artists of the Second World War . 1981 . Robert McLaughlin Gallery . Oshawa . 30. 23 July 2022.
  4. Book: Jelinski, Jamie . Needle Work: A History of Commercial Tattooing in Canada . McGill-Queen's University Press . 2024 . Montreal and Kingston.
  5. Jelinski. Jamie. Spring 2018. "An Artist's View of Tattooing": Aba Bayefsky and the Tattoo Scenes of Toronto and Yokohama, 1978–86. Journal of Canadian Studies. 52. 2 . 451–480. 10.3138/jcs.2017-0062.r2 . 150354531 . Project MUSE.