Dzubas narrowly escaped the Gestapo when he moved to London just one week before England declared war on Germany in September 1939. His real destination was New York City so after saving enough money he immigrated to America. After a series of jobs as a fieldhand, delivery man and a house painter, Dzubas met a publishing executive at a party who hired him as a designer for his office in Chicago. After the war, he headed back to New York and worked free-lance at whatever he could in order to spend time on his painting. While living in Manhattan, Dzubas rented a summer home in Connecticut in 1948. He possessed the good fortune of subletting part of his rental house to Clement Greenberg, writer and influential art critic. Greenberg introduced him to Wilhelm de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Mark Rothko and many other painters living in New York during that period. In 1951 he met Helen Frankenthaler who was looking for studio space near her own apartment. Dzubas found a loft near her apartment and the two of them shared the space for about a year in 1952. During this same year Helen painted her breakthrough painting, Mountains and Sea. Low March shows evidence of Dzubas? early interest in landscape painting with its colors coming directly from nature. Quoted in an interview in 1982, Dzubas said that ?When I make what they call art, when I?m up at my studio and work away, I?m in one piece.
Low March
by Dzubas, Friedel (American, b. Germany 1915-1994)1979
Categorized in Painting