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Eli Bornstein: Life & Work
By Roald Nasgaard
Eli Bornstein (b.1922) occupies a unique place in the story of modern art in Canada. For some seven decades he has devoted his artistic career to working with abstract three-dimensional works, or Structurist Reliefs, as he has dubbed them. These reliefs, unlike flat paintings, are multicoloured objects that extend into the world, their appearances changing with the play of light and shadow and with the onlooker’s viewpoint. Simultaneously, Bornstein has always rooted his art in an intense study of the phenomena of nature.
In Eli Bornstein: Life & Work, Roald Nasgaard traces the story of Bornstein’s career, starting from his youth in Milwaukee, Minnesota, and his permanent move to Saskatoon in 1950. He explores how the artist—while navigating the major modernist movements from Impressionism and Post-Impressionism to Constructivism and De Stijl—became one of the first in Saskatoon’s then-conservative cultural circles to engage with abstract art. Readers are taken through Bornstein’s passion for the prairie terrain, his travels to Europe and in North America, and eventually his two journeys to the Canadian Arctic in the 1980s. Out of the Arctic came a series of grand multiplane reliefs that stand as the most sublime work of his long career.
A steadfast student of the modernist tradition, Eli Bornstein was a singular innovator. He was also a prolific writer and a skilled editor whose influential periodical The Structurist was published and distributed internationally from 1960 to 2020. Neither strictly a painter nor a sculptor, Bornstein may stand as something of a loner in the history of Canadian art. But he stands equally as an artist of major ambition and distinctive aesthetic achievement.
$40 CAD
ISBN 978-1-4871-0368-2
Hardcover | 8 x 11 | 120 pp