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Jack Savitsky was a coal miner, with a sixth grade education who
lived and mined in Lansford, Pennsylvania. In 1959 he contracted Black Lung
disease. His son, Jack, reminded him that he enjoyed drawing and painting in his
youth. Jack's wife, Mary Lou, was an art teacher and supplied him with acrylics
and other art supplies. Savitsky's work came to the attention of Sterling
Strauser, the self-effacing artist, collector and supporter of Self-Taught
Artists. Strauser got recognition for Savitsky and he enjoyed fame in his
lifetime.
After a time, Savitsky could no longer paint because of his
debilitating illness and began to draw with colored pencils. Mary Lou supplied
him with high quality paper which he used along side with cereal box tops and
anything he could get his hands on.
Savitsky worked from memory,
creating many coal mining scenes, but his vision went much further and he would
experiment with varied images, from religious to imaginary. He worked on canvas,
wood, rocks, etc. His works range in size from 4" x 4" to 4' x 6'.
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