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The Bob Ross of the Borscht Belt is finally getting a New York City show

Morris Katz’s ‘instant art’ will be on view at YIVO

Morris Katz painted like no one else. 

He would dip a palette knife into a paint can and use it like a brush, daub a canvas with toilet paper to fill in details and frame the piece to order while schmoozing with an audience. He was so quick that the Guinness Book of World Records cited him twice, as the world’s fastest painter and as the most prolific artist, the latter title taken from Picasso.  

But while Katz, whose unorthodox technique and incredible speed calls to mind a more stimulating Bob Ross, was a mainstay of the Borscht Belt circuit, he is only now, 14 years after his death, getting a New York City show. Starting May 16, The Instant Art of Morris Katz will be on view at YIVO.

Katz painted a lot of clowns. Courtesy of the Oeuvre Family Collection

YIVO’s Director of Exhibitions Eddy Portnoy first encountered Katz on a kibbutz in Israel in 1989, where the dynamic, Polish-born painter set up 20 easels and filled them all while telling his life story of surviving the Holocaust and learning to paint in a displaced persons camp in Germany. Once he finished his spiel, and his Yiddish jokes with the audience, Katz auctioned off the paintings. People clamored to buy these speedy, if not exactly museum-ready, objets d’art.

“The draw was Morris Katz,” said Portnoy, “He was like a painter tummler, and I guess genuinely a performance artist.”

One of many of Katz’s seascapes. Photo by the Oeuvre Family Collection

Katz died in 2010, but, through the ’70s and ’80s, became a well-known New York character, appearing on local television, and at Catskill resorts where he made art collectors of everyone.

“Talk to anyone who stayed in the Borscht Belt, they almost surely saw him and quite possibly have his paintings in their basement,” said Portnoy.

Katz immigrated to the U.S. in 1949. He took art classes and soon found himself losing patience in the process, developing his brush-free “Instant Art” schmearing as an alternative. 

A natural showman with a thick accent, Katz has an enduring fanbase, with many young people having inherited his work from their grandparents. (My mother remembers seeing Katz, but can’t recall if it was at the Nevele sometime in the ’90s or earlier.)

For the exhibit, which follows a previous show at the Borscht Belt Museum in Ellenville, Portnoy is hanging landscapes, seascapes and Judaica alongside clown and animal paintings, including a Morris Katz cat. There won’t be a Katz impersonator, Portnoy said, but there will be video of him cranking out work at lightning speed and charming the crowd.

At the opening reception, visitors can walk away with a 5-by-7-inch painting for a small donation. But, if you have your eyes on anything on the gallery wall, you can take it home with you.

“Everything is for sale,” Portnoy said. “As far as Morris Katz was concerned, everyone needed to walk away with a painting.”

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