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AMERICAN PIETA

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FRITZ EICHENBERG, born in1901 was a German-American illustrator and arts educator who worked primarily in wood engraving. His best-known works were concerned with religionsocial justice and nonviolence.

 He was born to a Jewish family in Cologne, Germany, where the destruction of World War I helped to shape his anti-war sentiments. He worked as a printer's apprentice, and studied at the Municipal School of Applied Arts in Cologne and the Academy of Graphic Artsin Leipzig.


In 1923 he moved to Berlin to begin his career as an artist, producing illustrations for books and newspapers. In his newspaper and magazine work, he was politically outspoken and sometimes both wrote and illustrated his own reporting.

In 1933, the rise of Adolf Hitler convinced Fritz, a public critic of the Nazis, to emigrate with his wife and children to the United States, where he settled in New York City for most of the remainder of his life.

He taught art at the New School for Social Research and at Pratt Institute and was part of the WPA'sFederal Arts Project and was a member of the Society of American Graphic Artists.  He  also served as the head of the art department at the University of Rhode Island and laid out the printmaking studios there.

In his prolific career as a book illustrator, he worked with many forms of literature but specialized in material with elements of extreme spiritual and emotional conflict, fantasy, or social satire, illustrating such authors as include DostoyevskyTolstoyCharlotte and Emily BrontëPoe, and Swift. He also wrote children's stories.

 Raised in a non-religious family, Fritz had been attracted to Taoism as a child. Following his wife's unexpected death in 1937, he turned briefly to the practice of Zen Buddhist meditation, then joined the Religious Society of Friends in 1940. Though he remained a Quaker until his death, he was also associated with Catholic charity work through his friendship with Dorothy Day, whom he met at a Quaker conference on religion and publishing in 1949. He frequently contributed illustrations to Dorothy Day's newspaper the "Catholic Worker".

 He died at home in Peace Dale, Rhode Island in 1990 at age 89 of complications from Parkinson's disease.



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