Leo Katz
1 2023-05-23T13:47:31-07:00 Maria Hernandez 8c5d3a6c8021c0623f5c8be8fd20d720c5c8beca 42723 2 plain 2023-05-23T13:48:50-07:00 Maria Hernandez 8c5d3a6c8021c0623f5c8be8fd20d720c5c8becaContents of this annotation:
- 1 2023-05-23T13:27:27-07:00 Maria Hernandez 8c5d3a6c8021c0623f5c8be8fd20d720c5c8beca Artist Leo Katz points the "Youth Arisen" panel of his mural at the Frank Wiggins Trade School, Los Angeles, 1935 3 Leo Katz points to a section of the central, "Youth Arisen," panel of his mural of three panels. In this panel a central youth, with his eyes closed, is shown between creative uses of technology (like the movie camera seen in this photograph) and destructive uses as in war. The overall theme of the murals shown in the other two panels is the history of the uses of tools serving the creative and destructive passions of man within the context of the Toltec and Aztec cultures. The mural was controversial especially because of the depictions of nudity and references to war in the central panel. The central panel was removed from the Frank Wiggins Trade School lobby (now LA Trade Tech) and returned to the Public Works Administration in 1935 and the other two panels were returned in 1939. Katz was an American painter, printer, and teacher. Katz studied at the Fine Arts Academy in Vienna. He arrived in America in 1921 and later became an American citizen. plain 2023-06-13T18:43:40-07:00 UCLA Library Digital Collections 1935 34.052235, -118.243683 Los Angeles Daily News Adelmar Ramirez a4bf3b19b77c9f4b12cc64aa3ed1a273dcebf85a