About the Artwork
Jacques Lipchitz dedicated several drawings, prints, and a sculpture to the struggle between the ancient Greek hero, Theseus, and the Minotaur, the monster imprisoned in the labyrinth in Crete. Here, as the creature raises his horns and roars, Theseus wrestles his foe from behind. The artist connected the heroism of Theseus to that of Charles de Gaulle, leader of the Free French Forces in World War II. As Lipchitz wrote in his 1972 memoir, “The Minotaur is Hitler and I was thinking about de Gaulle as Theseus . . . I had heard the first speech of de Gaulle from England, in which he said that France had lost a battle but not the war, and it would survive and become victorious.” In May 1940 Lipchitz and his wife fled from Paris before the city was occupied by the German Army. By 1941 they arrived in New York City, where he made this print.
Theseus
1943
Jacques Lipchitz
1891–1973
French and American
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Etching, liquid-ground aquatint, and engraving printed in black ink on heavy, cream wove paper
Plate: 13 7/8 × 11 1/4 inches (35.2 × 28.6 cm) Sheet: 19 1/2 × 15 inches (49.5 × 38.1 cm)
Prints
Prints, Drawings & Photographs
Museum Purchase, Lee and Tina Hills Graphic Arts Fund
2011.36
Restricted
Markings
Signed, lower right: J Lipchitz
Inscribed, lower left: 5/50
Provenance
2011-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)For more information on provenance, please visit:
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Credit Line for Reproduction
Jacques Lipchitz, Theseus, 1943, etching, liquid-ground aquatint, and engraving printed in black ink on heavy, cream wove paper. Detroit Institute of Arts, Museum Purchase, Lee and Tina Hills Graphic Arts Fund, 2011.36.
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