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    Adolph Gottlieb Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Adolph Gottlieb? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Adolph Gottlieb from Artists and what is the personality traits.

    Adolph Gottlieb
    INFP

    INFP (5w4)

    Adolph Gottlieb personality type is INFP, but he was a bit of a dark horse somewhat off the beaten path. He was a genius, a scholar, a peripatetic wanderer, a child of the Enlightenment, a lover of learning and the arts, a self-taught philosopher, a mystic, a mystic of the highest order, a born spiritualist, elusive, complex, complexured, hungry for knowledge and truth, obsessed with union with God, obsessed with knowledge of self, a teacher to those he came in contact with, a man of many contradictions, someone who is an enigma wrapped in mystery.

    “I think that Jung is theoretically and philosophically one of the most remarkable minds of our time and that on all essential points he is absolutely correct. However, he has fallen into some errors and inconsistencies of his own which it is necessary to correct on principle. I have no wish to meddle with him as such, but I claim the right to say what I think about him.” –Carl Jung

    “My father was a very profound and original thinker, and I think he was one of the most important people of this century.” –Carl Jung

    Adolph Gottlieb (March 14, 1903 – March 4, 1974) was an American abstract expressionist painter, sculptor and printmaker. Adolph Gottlieb, one of the "first generation" of Abstract Expressionists, was born in New York in 1903 to Jewish parents. From 1920–1921 he studied at the Art Students League of New York, after which, having determined to become an artist he left high school at the age of 17 and worked his passage to Europe on a merchant ship. He traveled in France and Germany for a year. He lived in Paris for 6 months during which time he visited the Louvre Museum every day and audited class Gottlieb had his first solo exhibition at the Dudensing Galleries in New York City in 1930. During the 1920s and early 1930s he formed lifelong friendships with other artists such as Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko, David Smith, Milton Avery, and John Graham. In 1935, he and nine others, including Ben-Zion, Joseph Solman, Ilya Bolotowsky, Louis Harris, Jack Kufeld, Mark Rothko, and Louis Schanker.

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