Maurice Glickman (January 6, 1906 – May 1981) was an American sculptor noted for his New Deal-era sculpture for public buildings.
"[1] In 1936, Glickman created one of 203 artworks that appeared in a touring exhibition of the U.S. that was ultimately meant to be donated to a new art museum in Birobidzhan, USSR.
[21] In 1940 his sculpture Football Players, commissioned by the NY WPA, was exhibited at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
[23] Glickman's abstracted aluminum sculpture Pearl Divers was photographed and featured in the New York Times coverage of a Whitney exhibit in 1946.
[25] The GI Bill allowed many former U.S. soldiers and sailors, such as comic artist John Powers Severin, to afford tuition at the school.
[5] At one time Glickman's art was sold through the Florence Lewison Gallery of New York City.