Most people are familiar with the imposing bronze statue in Rotterdam's
city center. Known as The Destroyed City, it is considered worldwide to
be one of the most impressive monuments to the victims of World War II.
It is so well known that, unusually for a statue on a public space, many
people even know the name of its creator: Zadkine. But who was Zadkine?
And what else did he do? This book provides a comprehensive overview of
the work of this Parisian master of modernism, who, with his fellow
artists like Picasso, Brancusi, and Lipchitz, transformed the face of
Western sculpture forever. Zadkine's capacity for continually
reinventing himself and developing new forms and shapes in response to
the changing world around him marks him out as one of the greatest
artists of his day. The book focuses particularly on Zadkine's bond with
the Netherlands, where his collectors and those who commissioned his
work often counted as his friends. Text in English and Dutch.