Ida Lansky Explained

Ida G. Lansky
Birth Name:Ida G. Leranbaum
Birth Date:1910
Birth Place:Toronto, Ontario
Death Date:November 27, 1997
Death Place:Dallas, Texas
Resting Place:Toronto, Canada
Education:Texas Woman's University
Known For:Photography
Style:Bauhaus
Spouse:Irving Lansky (1945-1970)

Ida G. Lansky (née Leranbaum 1910 – November 27, 1997) was a Canadian-born American photographer. She was most active between 1954 and 1960, when she stopped publicly exhibiting her work and chose to study library science. Lansky is known as an important pioneer of Modernist photography in Texas, known as Texas Bauhaus.[1]

Biography

Lansky was born in Toronto, Ontario in 1910.[2] She received a BS in public health nursing from New York University in 1942.[3] Her photography career took place roughly at the same time she studied visual art at Texas Woman's University from 1954 to 1959.[4]

A major influence on Lansky was photographer, Carlotta Corpron, who worked in the Bauhaus style and who taught at Texas Woman's University.[5] Lansky was one of her students and was introduced to the avant-garde, Bauhaus ideal by Corpron.[6]

Lansky's earlier photographs were considered "regular," though they show an "interest in reflection, distortion and abstraction." Lansky was invited by Henry Holmes Smith to participate in a group exhibition, Photographer's Choice, at Indiana University. Photographer's Choice included works by Ansel Adams, Nathan Lyons and other well-known photographers.

Lansky was considered one of only a few artists in the mid-twentieth century who saw photography as a method for creating unique imagery rather than a method of representation. She was also an expert in the chemistry of photography, filling up notebooks with detailed records of her experiments. Lansky experimented with different light exposures, chemicals and temperatures, seeing how these variables affected the final prints.[7] Her "experiments" were also considered artistic: with galleries in Dallas, Texas and San Francisco inviting her to show her work.

In 1960, she exhibited at The Black Tulip Galleries in Dallas, which would be her last show. Lansky chose to pursue a career in library science instead of art. She attended Texas Woman's University again to receive her master's degree in Library Science in 1967. For almost twenty years, she worked at the University of Texas at Arlington as a cataloging librarian.

She died in Dallas, Texas in 1997.

Legacy

In 2006, the El Paso Museum of Art held a traveling exhibition of Lansky's work, along with her professor, Corpron and another photographer in the Texas Bauhaus style, Barbara Maples.[8] In 2015, Lansky's photographic innovations were featured in an exhibition titled Experimental Photography, held at Photographs Do Not Bend (PDNB) Gallery.[9] Lansky's estate is represented by the PDNB Gallery in Dallas. Her work is also in the collections of the El Paso Museum of Art[10] and the Amon Carter Museum of American Art.[11]

Lansky's work was included in the 2021 exhibition Women in Abstraction at the Centre Pompidou.[12]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gerstheimer, Christian John. Texas Bauhaus: The Photographs of Carlotta Corpron, Ida Lansky and Barbara Maples. El Paso Museum of Art. 2006. El Paso, Texas. 7–15. 65192282. Exhibition Catalog.
  2. Book: Texas Bauhaus: The Photographs of Carlotta Corpron, Ida Lansky and Barbara Maples. El Paso Museum of Art. 2006. El Paso, Texas. 53. 65192282. Exhibition Catalog.
  3. Web site: Ida G. Lansky Biography. March 12, 2015. Photographs Do Not Bend Gallery.
  4. Book: Texas 100. El Paso Museum of Art Foundation. 2006. 0978538307. El Paso, Texas. 68. Dura. Lucia.
  5. News: Gallery Gourmet: Exhibitions at PDNB, Galleri Urbane and Talley Dunn. Mora. Patricia. October 13, 2012. The Dallas Morning News. March 12, 2015.
  6. News: Opening Reception: Texas Bauhaus. September 28, 2012. Guide Live. August 27, 2015.
  7. Book: Experimental Photography. PDNB Gallery. 2015. Dallas, Texas. 31–35. August 27, 2015. Exhibition catalog.
  8. Web site: Texas Bauhaus: Experimental Photography. August 27, 2015. Modern Dallas.
  9. News: PDNB Gallery Presents Experimental Photography Opening Reception. November 22, 2014. Culture Map Dallas. August 27, 2015.
  10. Web site: The Judith Rothschild Foundation Grant Recipients for 2002. August 27, 2015. Judith Rothschild Foundation.
  11. Web site: Ida Lansky. August 27, 2015. Amon Carter Museum Of American Art.
  12. Book: Women in abstraction . 2021 . Thames & Hudson Ltd. ; Thames & Hudson Inc . London : New York, New York . 978-0500094372 . 170.