Leon Goldin
American artist (1923–2009)
Leon Goldin (1923–2009) was a post-war American painter and printmaker who worked in the tradition of abstract expressionism and high modernism. Goldin was born in 1923, earning his BFA at the Art Institute of Chicago and later his MFA at the University of Iowa, where he studied intaglio printmaking under Mauricio Lasansky. In 1953 he won a Fulbright Scholarship in Painting. In 1955 he was awarded the prestigious Prix de Rome, allowing him to work and study as a Fellow at the American Academy of Rome between 1955 and 1958. In 1959, Goldin returned to New York, where he was supported by a Guggenheim Fellowship. From 1964 to 1992, Goldin worked as a professor of art at Columbia University and later as the department chair. During this period up until his death in 2009, Goldin was represented by Kraushaar Galleries in New York. In 1971, he was listed in the Dictionary of Contemporary American Artists.