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After working for the US Department of Treasury
during the war, Berger was admitted on scholarship to ID, where
he studied design and received his BS in 1952. While still in
school, Berger received a one-person show at the prestigious Bordelon
Gallery in Chicago (1949) and participated in AIC's C & V exhibitions
starting in 1947 (and throughout the 1950's and early 1960's was
a frequent prizewinner ). Berger was also featured in the 1951
"American" Exhibition at AIC and participated in Exhibition Momentum
in 1950, 1952, and 1953. He showed in 1953 at both Baldwin Kingrey
and the Well of the Sea Restaurant at the Hotel Sherman, Chicago.
It was about this time that Berger became aware
of Leon Golub's work, and greatly admiring his style, began figurative
explorations again. He showed this work at the short lived artists'
cooperative Exhibit A in 1958. Through participation in these
exhibitions as well as shows at HPAC in the late 1950's and early
1960's, combined with his subject matter of the human figure in
strife-filled, mythological settings, Berger became associated
with the first generation of Imagists, the "Monster Roster". When
Franz Schulze included him in his seminal 1972 book 'Fantastic
Images', this categorization became well established, although
Berger's classical draftsmanship and choice of media - watercolor
and ink on paper - set him well apart from painters such as George
Cohen and Leon Golub or sculptors like Cosmo Campoli who are generally
associated with this moniker. From 1953 to 1970 Berger worked
in a commercial art studio; he also did occasional illustrations,
most notably for Playboy magazine. He taught extensively, most
importantly evening classes at ID shortly after he received his
degree there and at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts (1971 - 78)
and American Academy of Art (1979 - 86). - Written by Lynne Warren
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