He Cast a Look and Went Mad
Maurycy Minkowski
1910

Creator Bio
Maurycy Minkowski
Born in Warsaw into a wealthy Jewish family, Maurycy Minkowski suffered an illness at age five that left him permanently deaf. In 1888 he attended the Institute for the Deaf and Mute, where his artistic talents were recognized, ultimately leading him to study at the Kraków Academy of Fine Arts from 1901 to 1905. Amid Russia’s 1905 revolution and the devastating counterrevolutionary pogrom wave of 1905–1906, Minkowski toured Jewish communities and documented the Russo-Polish Jewish plight in a series of paintings—including After the Pogrom (1905)—that rendered Jewish dislocation and misery intimate and immediate. He also produced paintings seemingly concerned with East European Jewish folklife but at least in some cases attentive to the cultural and psychological conflicts of Jewish modernity, such as He Cast a Look and Went Mad. Minkowski lived in Paris for many years, returning to Eastern Europe for exhibitions. While touring Argentina in 1930, he was killed in in a traffic accident; the exhibition he intended to display there became the property of IWO (Argentina’s branch of the YIVO Institute).