Leon Goldin (1923–2009) was a post-war American painter and printmaker who worked in the tradition of abstract expressionism and high modernism.
[1] Goldin was born in 1923, earning his BFA at the Art Institute of Chicago and later his MFA at the University of Iowa, where he studied intaglio printmaking under Mauricio Lasansky.
[8] Goldin was affiliated with the Bay Area Figurative Movement[9] between 1950 and 1954, during which time he pioneered work in Color Field and unconventional printmaking techniques.
In New York, he was closely aligned with the Abstract Expressionist painters of the New York School, associating with and befriending other artists including David Lund, Karl Schrag, Jack Sonnenberg, Dan Hodermarsky, Stephen Pace (artist), Emily Mason, and Wolf Kahn.
[10] These disparate artists took inspiration from the landscape of Deer Isle, Maine, and many of them took up residence there part of the year, where they formed a tight-knit artistic community[11] Goldin's work can be found in the permanent collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art.,[12] LACMA,[13] the Brooklyn Museum,[14] the National Academy of Design,[12] the National Gallery of Art,[15] the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts,[16] and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.