Leonard Baskin American, 1922-2000
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Leonard Baskin’s Hephaestus is one of those sculptures that seems to announce itself before any explanation is needed. Rough, imposing, and unsettlingly human, it belongs to Baskin’s great body of work devoted to figures who are wounded, burdened, misshapen, or cast aside, yet never diminished. Writing in The New York Times in 1964, John Canaday called the sculpture audacious and “three-quarters life size,” recognizing in it one of Baskin’s most forceful achievements:
"It is the latest and most impressive development in Baskin's series of physically grotesque male nudes... Hephaestus, the lamed god of fire and blacksmith to other gods, stands with a great swollen growth of belly balanced over spindly legs, his monstrous torso surmounted by a battered, coarsely bearded head... This was the ugly god among the beautiful ones... To turn such a figure into a noble one without falling into sentimentality is the problem Baskin solves again and again... There are much fortitude, much pride of acceptance and even a high degree of good humor." (John Canaday, "Baskin and the Sooty God: In a New Exhibition, the American Sculptor Not Only Affirms His High Position, But Tops It," The New York Times, 9 February 1964)
The subject could hardly have been more fitting for Baskin. In Greek mythology, Hephaestus is rejected by Olympus because of his ugliness, yet he becomes the blacksmith of the gods—the maker of armor, objects, and extraordinary beauty. He appears in Homer’s Iliad, which Baskin illustrated for a deluxe edition in 1962, just one year before creating this sculpture. That connection gives the work a particular resonance. Baskin’s Hephaestus is not simply a mythological figure; he is the artist as outsider, craftsman, survivor, and maker. It is tempting to see in him something close to a self-portrait: a figure marked by physical imperfection, but also by intelligence, endurance, humor, and creative power.
Cast in bronze in 1963 in an edition of four, Hephaestus occupies an important place within Baskin’s sculptural work. Other examples from the edition are held in major museum collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell University. The Whitney example entered the museum’s collection in 1964, the same year Canaday singled out the sculpture in his review.
What makes the work so compelling is its refusal to soften or beautify its subject in any conventional way. Baskin does not disguise Hephaestus’s awkwardness or physical distortion. Instead, he gives the figure weight, presence, and dignity. The swollen torso, fragile legs, battered head, and rough surface all become part of the sculpture’s emotional force. Baskin finds nobility not by correcting the grotesque, but by allowing it to stand fully and unapologetically before us.
In that sense, Hephaestus is both ancient and unmistakably modern. It draws from Homeric myth, but its emotional language belongs to the twentieth century: scarred, unsentimental, psychologically direct. Like the god himself, Baskin’s figure transforms rejection into strength and imperfection into a severe, unforgettable kind of beauty.
Literature
John Canaday, "Baskin and the Sooty God: In a New Exhibition, the American Sculptor Not Only Affirms His High Position, But Tops It," The New York Times, 9 February 1964.
Jacob Nyenhuis, Myth and the Creative Process: Michael Ayrton and the Myth of Daedalus, the Maze Maker, Detroit, 2003, p. 67.
Catalogues
George Braziller, Baskin: Sculpture, Drawings & Prints, New York, 1970, no. 35, illustrated.
Irma Jaffe, The Sculpture of Leonard Baskin, New York, 1980, no. 114, pp. 10, 34, 168, 170, 214, illustrated.
