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While the patients sang Hail, Hail the Gang's All Here, State Education Inspector Albert A. Buchholz served the doctor with a summons to appear before the medical grievance committee of the State Department of Education. The charges: 1) operating a dispensary and clinic without a permit; 2) "falsely, fraudulently, deceitfully and unlawfully" allowing unlicensed persons to practice medicine in the clinic; 3) violating State law by advertising unethically in magazines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Body & Mind Raid | 5/4/1942 | See Source »

Baffled little Jacques Lipchitz was famed in pre-war Paris as the world's greatest cubist sculptor. He fled to the U.S. from Unoccupied France last summer with four of his ponderous bronze statues, no money. This week Manhattan's Buchholz Gallery presented his first U.S. show in six years. Cast in weird, glowering embryonic gobs whose lumpy lines suggested the random patterns of molten slag, Lipchitz's bronzes showed writhing subhuman and sub-animal figures. One, called Mother and Child, was a legless, stump-armed female torso, held by the neck in the ponderous grip...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Cubist Sculptor | 1/26/1942 | See Source »

...Aristide Maillol, who next week celebrates his 80th birthday in the little fishing village of Banyuls, in southern France. In spite of war, little Banyuls will give this spry oldster his usual birthday party. In Manhattan, his birthday is being celebrated by an exhibition of his sculpture at the Buchholz Gallery...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Maillol's Women | 12/8/1941 | See Source »

...most degenerate of all degenerate European artists (according to Hitler) is having his biggest exhibition in the U.S. A one-man show of Czech Oskar Kokoschka opened last week in Manhattan's Buchholz Gallery-full of pictures of the Freudian subconscious which Nazi officials have condemned and exiled as politically dangerous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Saints and Demons | 11/10/1941 | See Source »

Last week, at Manhattan's Buchholz Gallery, visitors saw one of the best cross-sections they had ever seen (38 carefully chosen pieces) of the sculpture of democratic Europe. The period it represented was a short one. The earliest piece, a bronze by Auguste Rodin, was dated approximately 1876, the latest, a clutch of slim-limbed nudes by French-born Charles Despiau and German-born Gerhard Marcks, just antedated Hitler's conquest of Poland. Some of this sculpture-figures by Aristide Maillol and Ernst Barlach-was stockily reposeful, others-Lehm-brucks' bulb-domed, emaciated Head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Democracy on Pedestals | 2/24/1941 | See Source »

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