Background
Glicenstein was born in Turek, Poland in 1870 and named Enoch Hendryk Glicenstein. His father was a teacher who also worked as a monumental mason. His son Emanuel was born in Rome, and Glicenstein became an Italian citizen.
Glicenstein was born in Turek, Poland in 1870 and named Enoch Hendryk Glicenstein. His father was a teacher who also worked as a monumental mason. His son Emanuel was born in Rome, and Glicenstein became an Italian citizen.
He initially showed interest in being a rabbi whilst working in Łódź painting signs and carving wood. The couple lived in Rome where he adopted the name "Enrico". In 1906, Glicenstein returned from a trip to Germany and exhibited his paintings there until World War I broke out and he moved his family to Poland.
He took over the Chair belonging to Xawery Dunikowski at the University of Warsaw in 1910.
At the end of the war the family lived in Switzerland until they emigrated to London in 1920. During the next eight years he exhibited first in London and later in Rome and Venice.
Glicenstein wanted to go to Israel but he died in a car accident in 1942. The Glicenstein Museum was founded in Safed, Israel.
lieutenant became the Israel Bible Museum in 1985, and many Glicenstein sculptures are still displayed there.
In 2008 the Deputy Mayor of Safed was indicted for stealing paintings that had been put in storage when the Glicenstein Museum changed its role. Glicenstein"s works are found in a number of collections including the Musée d"Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris and the Pompidou Centre, the Israel Museum, the Galleria Nazionale d"Arte Moderna in Rome, the Krakow and the Warsaw National Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Glicenstein has papers in the Smithsonian.
Jean Cassou has published a book on Glicenstein Sculpture.