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THE INDIVIDUAL EXHIBITIONS OF BORIS DEUTSCH HAVE BEEN SHOWN AS FOLLOWS: LOS ANGELES MUSEUM, Exposition Park, Los Angeles, Calif. - 1926 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, Southern Branch, Los Angeles, - Calif. 1926 SAN FRANCISCO - 1929 LOS ANGELES MUSEUM, Exposition Park, Los Angeles, Calif. - 1929 CALIFORNIA ART CLUB, Olive Hill, Los Angeles, Calif. - 1929 BERKELEY MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, Berkeley, California. - 1929 SEATTLE ART INSTITUTE, Seattle, Washington - 1929 SAN DIEGO MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, San Diego, California - 1930 Awarded First Prize for "Girl with Yellow Shawl." DENVER ART MUSEUM, Denver, Colorado - 1930 PORTLAND ART ASSOCIATION, Portland, Oregon - 1931 BERKELEY MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, Berkeley, California - 1931 THE PALACE OF THE LEGION OF HONOR, San Francisco, California - 1932 OAKLAND ART GALLERY, Oakland, California - 1932 LOS ANGELES MUSEUM, Los Angeles, California - 1932 Awarded Museum Award 1932 for "Womankind" Received the highest number of artists' votes during the 1931 Annual Exhibition of the Oakland Art Gallery. ^[[Dallas, Texas, Museum - 1933 Junius Cravens, "The ARGONAUT," San Francisco, Calif. "His works reveal that constant drive, that burning need of unalloyed self-expression which inevitably make for true art, and without which great or lasting art may not be created... It seems inevitable that many of his works must some day be cherished as being among the first examples of our contemporary period of American art." The Oakland "TRIBUNE": "Young Woman in White" by Boris Deutsch, to our notion would be worthy of everyone's visit to an art gallery to see alone ... and by alone we mean that if this one work "comprised" the 1931 annual exhibition of the Oakland Art Gallery, the annual exhibition sponsored by Oakland's municipal gallery would be a success." Donald J. Bare of the Denver Art Museum writes: "His drawings are serious and sensitive... He does not just paint pictures but rather conducts plastic experiments within the boundary of the frame." Ralph Flint writes in "CREATIVE ART": "Like Cezanne, he has been thrown back on himself by the very fact of his being differently constituted from the crowd, and while his isolation may have seemed severe in many ways, at the same time it has doubtless been of inestimable value in throwing him back upon his inner self and in acquiring a far deeper grasp of this own artistic capabilities." In 1930 Boris Deutsch was awarded the P.F. O'Rourke Purchase Prize for his "Girl With the Yellow Shawl" at the Fifth Annual Exhibition of Artists of Southern California, becoming a part of the permanent collection of the Fine Arts Gallery of San Diego.