Tadeusz Lapinski was born in Rawa Mazowiecka, Poland. As a child, he spent many hours, daily, at his grandfather's publishing enterprise. There, he learned to draw illustrations good enough to be printed in some of the publications.
During World War II, Tad’s family moved to Warsaw and, as a boy scout, he was involved in painting the "Fighting Poland" emblems on walls and sidewalks. He survived the five-year travail and continued his devotion to drawing by sketching ruins of bombed-out buildings and surviving historic structures throughout his high school years.
In 1952, he entered Warsaw University and graduated in 1956 with an MFA specializing in lithography. Thereafter, he worked out of his studio generating aquatints, lithographs, and paintings, and exhibiting in Bosnia, Macedonia, Croatia, Spain, Belgium, Switzerland, and Poland. Yugoslavian authorities enticed him to become a director of a Modern Art Center.
New York's Printing Institute at Pratt invited Lapinski to participate in an artist-in-residence program. While attending, he exhibited at MOMA and Cleveland Museum of Modern Art, selling all his lithographs.
Completing his stint at Pratt, he went on to exhibit in Brazil, Great Britain, Norway, Holland, Sweden, France, Germany, Austria, China, Taiwan, Canada, Mexico, Venezuela, Puerto Rico, Peru, Uruguay, Chile, Slovenia, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Australia, and Hawaii.
His art can be found in such institutions as the National Gallery, the White House, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, San Francisco Museum of Art, Museum of modern Art in Tokyo, Tianjin Museum in China and 200 other cultural centers.
He participated in over 220 exhibitions, most of them being one-man efforts, others with graduates of the Pratt program, and some with such distinguished artists as Joan Miro.
Amidst promoting his art, in 1972, Tadeusz Lapinski joined the faculty at the University of Maryland, College Park. He spent some 40 years instructing in the art of color lithography and painting. Besides using multiple plates, Prof. Lapinski, introduced his own special technique which he called "a rainbow effect" in his artistic images, generating most unusual metaphors and powerful images.
B.W. Fine Arts Gallery and Franz Bader Gallery represented Prof. Lapinski in Washington DC, and The Kennedy Gallery and Weintraub Gallery exhibited his works in New York City.
During his lifetime, he accumulated over forty major awards, among them the Unesco Medal for Cultural Contributions, gold and silver medals in the Audubon Society competition, the gold medal in Venice printed arts competition, and others.
He transitioned to retirement, while continuing to create and exhibit, both in the U.S. and Europe.
Prof. Lapinski departed from us on September 14, 2016.