Henry Orlik
Henry Orlik | |
|---|---|
| Born | January 6, 1947 Ankum, Germany |
| Known for | Painting, Draughtsmanship |
| Style | Surrealism |
| Movement | Surrealism |
| Patrons | Grant Ford |
Henry Orlik (born 6 January 1947) is a German-born British painter of Polish and Belorussian heritage.[1]
Orlik was born in Ankum, Germany.[2] Heralded as a young man as a talented draughtsman and surrealist who was exhibited alongside such painters as Salvador Dali, René Magritte, and Francis Picabia, he turned his back on the art world which he believed was populated by greedy art dealers.[3]
Many years later, his work was rediscovered by art dealer Antiques Road Show and former Sotheby's expert Grant Ford.[4]
In the meantime, he had suffered the loss of several dozen paintings from his council flat after having to be hospitalised following a stroke.[3]
Ford organized and helped mount a series of exhibitions of Orlik's work in England and New York, including at the Maas Gallery in London, and sales were hearty.[5][6]
References
- ^ Knight, Sam (June 17, 2025). "A Forgotten Surrealist's Paintings Return to New York" – via www.newyorker.com.
- ^ "Henry Orlik". Winsor Birch.
- ^ a b "Henry Orlik: The 'great' artist recluse and his 78 missing paintings". www.bbc.com. September 22, 2024.
- ^ "A Disillusioned Surrealist Art Star Is Making a Comeback—50 Years Later". August 6, 2024.
- ^ "Henry Orlik: Cosmos of Dreams | 9 - 20 August 2024". Winsor Birch.
- ^ "BLAST #15 | A Spring review". British Art Fair. Retrieved 2026-02-24.