Morris Topchevsky (1899-1947) was a Chicago-based social realist artist.[1]
Biography
Morris Topchevsky was born in Białystok, Poland (then a part of Russia) and immigrated to Chicago, Illinois with his family in 1910 to escape anti-Jewish violence. He worked both as a printmaker and a painter using oils and watercolor, and initially started his career as a sign painter. He studied art at the Hull House Settlement, and later at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. In 1924, he traveled to Mexico City where he met influential Mexican artists like Diego Rivera.[2]