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The Pointed Pen: William Sharps
Courtroom Drawings, Political Caricatures, and Book Illustrations
from the 1930s-1950s
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| DECEMBER
15, 2002-MARCH 2, 2003
OPENING RECEPTION JANUARY 12,
2003, 3-6PM
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The
Queens Museum of Art presents the first museum retrospective
of the work of William Sharp (1900-1961), an artist who
fled Nazi Germany and settled in Forest Hills, where he
became widely regarded for illustrations that captured
the political, racial, and economic tensions of the Cold
War era. The Pointed Pen: William Sharps Courtroom
Drawings, Political Caricatures, and Book Illustrations
from the 1930s-1950s brings together more than 250 illustrations,
etchings, and lithographs characterized by Sharps
keen ability to convey emotional truths often masked by
political and social conventions. Largely overlooked since
his death, Sharps drawings of famous trials, political
cartoons, and portraits of street life depict historical
events and moods from this fascinating period in American
history. This exhibition runs from December 15, 2002-March
2, 2003. An opening reception will be held January 12,
2003, 3-6pm.
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William Sharp, Untitled (war series), ca. 1940.
Ink, charcoal, and pencil on paper. 7" x 10 3/8".
Courtesy Harold Shachner
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Born Leon Schleifer in Lemberg, Austria (now part of
Ukraine), in 1900, Sharp studied fine art in Austria
and Poland before finishing his studies at the University
in Berlin in 1918. After serving briefly in the German
army at the end of World War I, he stayed on in Berlin
and worked as a book illustrator, painter, etcher, and
lithographer, and soon focused on courtroom trial sketches
and magazine work for the Berliner Tageblatt and Volk
und Zeit. In the late 1920s, as Adolph Hitlers
National Socialist Party grew, Sharp, under various
pseudonyms, drew political cartoons satirizing the party
and its leader in the anti-Nazi press. After being threatened
with imprisonment by the Nazis in 1933, Schleifer and
his wife Ruth fled the country and arrived in New York
the following year. In 1940, Schleifer became a United
States citizen and changed his name to William Sharp.
The Sharps settled in Forest Hills and stayed in the
same apartment until Williams death in 1961 and
Ruths in 2002.
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For his first
assignment in New York, Sharp found himself sketching
the extraordinary court case of Bruno R. Hauptmann, who
stood accused of kidnapping famed aviator Charles Lindberghs
baby in the trial of the century. Reproduced
in the New York Daily Mirror and in Hearst-owned papers
throughout the U.S., the case perhaps presaged his destiny
as the finest courtroom illustrator of his time. Sharp
went on to cover some of the most sensational trials of
the 1940s and 50s, including those of Alger Hiss,
the Brinks Robbery, and Tokyo Rose, which are included
in this exhibition.
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Outside the
courtroom, Sharp frequently lampooned American society
in the pages of Life, PM, and Esquire magazines. He was
deeply concerned with racial injustice and created several
series of drawings that addressed the welfare and treatment
of African-Americans in the legal system. He also completed
a series of works celebrating jazz culture in the '50s,
many of whose key figures lived in Queens. He often addressed
the peccadilloes of New York life in Coronet, Colliers,
the New York Post, and, for over twenty-five years, The
New York Times Magazine. With a cast of characters that
ranged from political heavyweight Joseph Stalin to prize
fighter Joe Louis, Sharp combined progressive politics
and a knack for detail, resulting in unforgettable images
that carried unequivocal meaning as well as broad appeal.
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The Pointed
Pen: William Sharps Courtroom Drawings, Political
Caricatures, and Book Illustrations from the 1930s-1950s
is curated by Valerie Smith, Director of Exhibitions.
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This exhibition is made possible by Natalie and Harold
Shachner.
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Press Contact:
David Strauss, (718) 592-9700, ext. 145, dstrauss@queensmuseum.org
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