Warsaw, Poland - An exhibition is opening in Warsaw of abstract works by prominent American painter Frank Stella that were inspired by painted wooden synagogues that once existed across Poland but were destroyed by the Nazis during World War II.
“Frank Stella and the Synagogues of Historic Poland” opens Friday at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews and will run through June 20.
Museum officials say it is the first time that Stella’s geometrical and highly abstract works have been shown alongside the sources that inspired him — architectural drawings and documentary photos of synagogues taken before the war — as well as models and drawings of his own that he used to create his large-scale constructions.
U.S. artist Frank Stella poses in front of one of his works at an exhibition devoted to him in Warsaw, Poland, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2016. "Frank Stella and the Synagogues of Historic Poland" opens Friday at the POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews and will run through June 20. It showcases abstract works that he created in the 1970s which were inspired by pre-World War II wooden synagogues in Poland. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)... Read More: VIN