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Art

October 2000

Rudy Burckhardt, 1914-1999

by Karen Wilkin

The news that Rudy Burckhardt had ended his life last year, aged eighty-five, was startling and saddening. It seemed impossible that the small, vital, bearded man with the bemused expression would no longer be part of the New York art world, that he would no longer be turning his exacting, but oddly dispassionate gaze on the most unlikely—and sometimes the most seemingly obvious—parts of his adopted, much-loved city. (“What I love about New York,” Burckhardt once said, “is that it just grew up wildly”—this in contrast to his native Basel, which he described as “lonely and empty and proper and clean.”) It was easier to think that he was simply spending longer than usual at his house in Maine, where he had been scrutinizing bark and leaves with the same attention that in the city he accorded urban roofscapes, building façades, and shoals of pedestrians. Yet the news also provoked admiration. Burckhardt&# ...

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Karen Wilkin is an editor at The Hudson Review and on the faculty at the New York Studio School
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 19 October 2000, on page 50
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