Thursday, September 11, 2008

Essay: Paul Reed

PAUL REED
By Wim Roefs

Washington, D.C., native Paul Reed has experimented with media and techniques throughout his long career. After an Abstract Expressionist period in the 1950s, Reed in 1959 began to use water-based acrylics, then a recent invention. “I started staining canvas, wetting the canvas, pouring the paint and letting it bleed,” he says. 

Reed would in the next five decades also create metal sculpture and photographic collages in which two seemingly unrelated photos and their mirror images were joined. He would make pastel drawings and shaped canvases, some of them directly nailed to the wall. He also produced gouache paintings done on plexiglass and transferred to paper. In the 1980s and 1990s, he did “stone portraits,” simply appropriating from nature stones that reminded him of sculptures by Rodin, Giacometti or Boccioni and putting them on pedestals. 

By then, Reed was already part of art history. In the 1960s, he was integral to Washington Color Field painting. The color field painters included Kenneth Noland and Morris Louis, who in the early 1950s had picked up the staining technique when visiting Helen Frankenthaler. Reed, Noland and Morris, plus Gene Davis, Howard Mehring and Tom Downing, were the artists in “The Washington Color Painters,” and exhibition that traveled the country in 1965-66. The show marked the development in Washington, D.C., of a cooler, post-painterly, frequently hard-edged abstraction that stood in contrast to the more gestured, individualistic approach of many Abstract Expressionists. 

Reed was represented in the mid-1960s show with his geometric, relatively hard-edged “Disc” paintings. The paintings on unprimed canvas all had a circle in the center of the rectangular canvas and two triangles in opposite corners. Within this format, Reed would vary the colors of the individual fields to great visual and spatial effect, not unlike Josef Albers in his square paintings. 

But, as Claudine Humblet wrote in her recent three-volume book Nouvelle Abstraction Américaine 1950 –1970, Reed “approached the abstract adventure with individuality, without deliberately subscribing to the grip of a single dogma or giving in to the attraction of a single infatuation.” He would follow the Disc paintings with his Upstart series, such as the 1965 paintings Upstart 18F, #18L and #18R. By painting bands of colors that simultaneously overlay and sat next to each other, Reed explored color effects within a context of expressionism and geometry. 

Reed does so again in recent work such as GIJ and GMK, albeit in different forms. The equal attention to color, space and shape that Legrace G. Benson noted in a 1969 review in Art International remains, as does the spatial illusion created by layers of thin transparent glazes. Reed enhances the spatial effects nowadays by adding strips of thicker paint that form diagonally placed “platforms,” creating paintings that are reminiscent of some of his 1950s Abstract Expressionist work. The thick-and-thin contrast adds another dimension to what Benson called Reed’s “ambivalent spaces.” 

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Resume: Paul Reed

Selected Group Exhibitions
1964 Museum of Modern Art, New York City
1965 Institute of Modern Art, Washington, DC
1965 Art Institute of Chicago 25th Annual Exhibition of the Society of American Art
1965 Phoenix Museum, Inaugural Exhibition
1965-66 Washington Gallery of Modern Art, circulated to: University of Texas Art Galleries, Austin TX Art Gallery, University of California at Santa Barbara, CA Rose Art Galleries, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN
1966 John Heron Art Museum
1966 Des Moines Art Center, Op Art
1966 National Collection of Fine Arts - The Hard Edge Trend White House Rotation Exhibition of Contemporary Art, Recent Acquisitions Exhibition
1966 American Embassy in Damascus Exhibition
1967 Philbrook Art Center, Tulsa, Oklahoma – Collectors Choice VII
1967 School of Visual Arts Gallery, New York City – Homage to Morandi
1967 Corcoran Gallery of Art, Recent Acquisitions
1968 Comprehensive Survey National Collection of Fine Arts
1968 the Jefferson Place Ten Years, Washington, DC
1968 Museum of Art, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK – East Coast-West Coast Paintings
1969 Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, CT – Inaugural Exhibtion
1969 Steinberg Gallery of Art, Washington University], St. Louis, MO - The Development of Modern Painting, Jackson Pollack to Present
1969 The Westmoreland County Museum of Art, 10th Anniversary Exhibition
1969 University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
1969 Dec. Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, FL – The Washington Painters
1970 Feb. Jacksonville Art Museum, Jacksonville, FL - The Washington Painters
1970 May Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD – Washington Twenty Years
1970 Jul. Colorado Springs Fine Art Center - New Accessions USA
1971 Jan. Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC – Melzac Collection
2000-2002 Multiple-Venue Tour in Modernism and Abstraction; Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum

Selected Solo Shows

1964 Jan. Jefferson Place Gallery, Washington, DC
1964 Dec. East Hampton Gallery, New York City
1966 Jan. Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC
1966 Apr. East Hampton Gallery, New York City
1966 Aug East Hampton Gallery, New York City
1967 Mar. Steinberg Gallery of Art, Washington University, St. Louis, MO
1967 Nov. Jefferson Place Gallery, Washington, DC
1967 Nov. Bertha Schaefer Gallery, New York City
1970 U.S. Peace Corps, Washington, DC
1971 Apr. Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ
1971 May Northern Virginia Community College, Annandale, VA
1971 Oct. Pyramid Gallery, Washington, DC
1971 Dec. Bertha Schaefer Gallery, New York City
1973 Feb. Pyramid Gallery, Washington, DC
1976 Aug. Chilmark Gallery, Martha’s Vineyard
1977 Jan. Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ
1978 Mar. Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, AZ
1979 Mar. Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, AZ
1979 Dec. Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, AZ
1981 Apr. Yares Gallery, Scottsdale, AZ
1982 Mar-Apr WPA (Washington Project for the Arts) , Washington, DC
1997 Feb. Watkins Gallery, Washington, DC
1997 Nov. the Arts Club of Washington, Washington, DC

Paul Reed is also in more than 50 public collections including: the Detroit Institute of Art in Detroit, Michigan; Emory University in Atlanta, GA; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculptural Garden in Washington, DC; the National Museum of Art in Washington, DC; the Phoenix Museum of Art in Phoenix, AZ; the Santa Barbara Museum in Santa Barbara, California; and the Wadsworth Athanaeum in Hartford, CT.

Monday, August 25, 2008

Biography: Paul Reed

PAUL REED (American, b. 1919)

Washington, D.C., native Paul Reed, in 1965-1966 was with Kenneth Noland and Morris Louis among the six painters in The Washington Color Painters, the first nationally traveling Washington Color Field exhibition. Reed has experimented with media and techniques throughout his career. After an Abstract Expressionist period, Reed in 1959 began staining canvasses using water-based acrylics, then a recent invention. Over the next five decades, he also created metal sculpture and photographic collages. He made pastel drawings and shaped canvases, some of them directly nailed to the wall. He also produced gouache paintings done on plexiglass and transferred to paper. Reed’s work is in dozens of museums across the country, including the Phillips Collection, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, all in D.C., the Detroit Institute of Art, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the Dallas Museum of Art, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the San Francisco Museum of Art and the Art Institute of Chicago. In South Carolina, his work is in the Greenville County Museum of Art and the Columbia Museum of Art.

Monday, August 27, 2007

The Fame Factor: September 7-18, 2007

if ART PRESENTS AT GALLERY 80808/VISTA STUDIOS:

THE FAME FACTOR

Featuring art by:

Benny Andrews (American, 1930-2006) – Karel Appel (Dutch, 1921-2006) – Lynn Chadwick (British, 1914-2003) – Corneille (Dutch, b. 1922) – Jacques Doucet (French, 1924-1994) – John Hultberg (American, 1922-2005) – Richard Hunt (American, b. 1935) – Wilfredo Lam (Cuban, 1902-1982) – Ibram Lassaw (American, 1913-2003) – Ger Lataster (Dutch, b. 1920) – Lucebert (Dutch, 1924-1994) – Sam Middleton (American, b. 1927) ¬– Joan Mitchell (American, 1925-1992) – Hannes Postma (Dutch, b. 1933) – Reinhoud (Belgian, 1928-2007) – Paul Reed (American, b. 1919) – Edward Rice (American, b. 1953) – Kees Salentijn (Dutch, b. 1947) – Virginia Scotchie (American, b. 1959) – Leo Twiggs (American, b. 1934) – Bram van Velde (Dutch, 1895-1981)

September 7 – 18, 2007

Opening Reception: Friday, Sept. 7, 2007, 5:00 – 10:00 PM

Opening Hours: Weekdays, 11:00 AM – 7:00 PM; Sat., 11:00 AM – 5:00 PM;
Sun, 1:00 – 5:00 PM


In September, work by world-famous artists such as Joan Mitchell, Karel Appel, Lynn Chadwick, Wilfredo Lam and Bram van Velde will be in The Fame Factor, a group show at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios in Columbia organized by if ART Gallery. The exhibition also will include if ART Gallery artists Leo Twiggs, Edward Rice, Kees Salentijn,Virginia Scotchie, Laura Spong and Paul Reed. The Fame Factor will explore the concept of fame, especially the relativity of fame.

The exhibition opens September 7 with a reception from 5:00 – 10:00 p.m. and runs through September 18. Opening hours for Gallery 80808/Vista Studios will be expanded during the if ART exhibition. They will be weekdays, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m.; Sat., 11:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.; Sun, 1:00 – 5:00 p.m.

Other American artists with national and even international reputations in the show are Richard Hunt, Benny Andrews, Ibram Lassaw, Paul Reed, John Hultberg and Sam Middleton, an American artist who has lived in the Netherlands since the early 1960s. Dutch artists with international fame in addition to Appel and Van Velde will be Corneille, Ger Lataster, Hannes Postma, Kees Salentijn and Lucebert. Furthermore, the show will present French artist Jacques Doucet and Belgian artist Reinhoud.

Reinhoud and Doucet both were part of the legendary CoBrA group of Northern European artists from the late 1940s and 1950s, which also included Appel, Corneille and Lucebert. “CoBrA” stands for Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam, the cities or origin of most of the major figures in the group. Another artist in the show, Wilfredo Lam, a Cuban artist who had a vast international reach, exhibited once with CoBrA, in the early 1950s, though he was not a member. All of these artists are in the collections of major American museums. Dutchman Salentijn works in a post-CoBrA style.

Hunt, Lassaw, Chadwick and Reinhoud are sculptors. All will be represented in the exhibition with limited-edition lithographs. Hunt, from Chicago, is one of the country’s most famous living sculptors, in part for his many public sculptures. Lassaw was one of the main sculptors in the New York School and a core figure on the city’s 1940s-1950s Abstract Expressionist scene. Chadwick is one of the most prominent figures among British sculptors of the generation of Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth.

Sam Middleton, born in Harlem, NY, but living in the Netherlands, is known for his collages inspired by jazz; the exhibition will show some of his silkscreens. Lataster is one of the Netherlands’ most prominent Abstract-Expressionist painters; his work is in several major American museums. Postma established a big reputation in Europe in the 1960s with his etchings and aquatints, some of which will be in the show. Bram van Velde, who spent most of life and career in Paris, is a legendary figure among mid-20th-century European abstractionists.

Hultberg was part of the New York School scene but subsequently moved to California. Andrews was from Georgia but built his career in New York City, becoming one of the country’s most prominent African-American artists, who increasingly gained traction in the wider art community. Reed was with Kenneth Noland, Morris Louis and Gene Davis among the original Washington Color Field painters of the 1960s. Mitchell is simply one of the most famous Abstract-Expressionist painters.

Twiggs, from Orangeburg, S.C., most likely is the country’s most prominent pioneer with batik as a contemporary art medium. Scotchie is a ceramist with an international reputation who teaches at the University of South Carolina. Rice, from North Augusta, S.C., is represented in many museums in the Southeast. Spong’s reputation has grown by leaps in recent years and is now among South Carolina’s best-known abstract painters.

“The idea of the show is to explore how relative fame is,” if ART Wim Roefs said. “Several feet worth of books and catalogues on Appel, and a few feet on Mitchell, don’t change the fact that among people attending this show, Laura Spong is probably better known – and she makes do with a single 32-page catalogue. Leo Twiggs also is better known here than Appel and Mitchell. Someone like Van Velde is legendary in Europe. Though he had New York gallery shows in the United States, and though his work is in many major American museums, he is at best obscure around here. In general, of course, a lot of famous European artists aren’t well-known in the United States.”

“Lassaw really was one of the major sculptors among Abstract Expressionists, but, of course, sculptors, except for David Smith, played third fiddle in the movement compared to the painters. Reed was one of six artists in the first nationally traveling exhibition of Washington Color Field painters, with Kenneth Noland and Morris Louis, and he makes the art-history books. Still, he’s mainly known among art insiders, though the renewed recent appreciation of color-field painting has giving him new exposure, too.”

Sunday, March 4, 2007

1965 DISC PAINTINGS

if ART Gallery no longer carries Disc paintings by Paul Reed in the gallery but can still connect collectors with the work. Please contact Wim Roefs at if ART at (803) 238-2351 or through wroefs@sc.rr.com.

Please also check back soon on this site for works on paper by Reed.












Friday, January 26, 2007

Abstract in Nature: February 9-20, 2007

if ART, International Fine Art Services
presents at
Gallery 80808/Vista Studios, 808 Lady St., Columbia, S.C.

A b s t r a c t I n N a t u r e:
Featuring
Washington Color Field Great
PAUL REED
and
South Carolina’s
LAURA SPONG
KATIE WALKER
MIKE WILLIAMS

Feb. 9 – 20, 2007

Artists’ Reception:
Friday, Feb. 9, 5 – 10 p.m.

Opening Hours:
Saturdays, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m.
Sundays, 1 – 5 p.m.
Weekdays, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.
and by appointment

Contact Wim Roefs at if ART:(803) 238-2351 – wroefs@sc.rr.com

For its February exhibition at Gallery 80808/Vista Studios in Columbia, S.C., if ART, International Fine Art Services, presents Abstract In Nature, a group exhibition with work by South Carolina artists Laura Spong, Mike Williams and Katie Walker as well as renowned first-generation Washington Color Field painter Paul Reed. The show consists of abstract paintings by Reed, Spong and Walker and abstract metal sculpture by Williams. The exhibition opens Friday, Feb. 9, with a reception from 5:00 –10:00 p.m. and runs through Feb. 20. Opening hours are weekdays, 11:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m., Saturdays, 11 a.m. – 5:00 p.m., and Sundays 1:00 ¬ – 5:00 p.m. Reed, Spong and Walker are represented by Columbia’s if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln St., (803) 238-2351, which also shows sculpture by Williams.

Washington, D.C., native Paul Reed, (b. 1919) in 1965-1966 was one of the six painters in The Washington Color Painters, the first nationally traveling exhibition of Washington Color Field paintings. The other five painters were Kenneth Noland, Morris Louis, Gene Davis, Howard Mehring and Tom Downey. Reed’s work is in dozens of museums across the country, including the Phillips Collection, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the National Museum of American Art, all in D.C., the Detroit Institute of Art, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Wadsworth Athenaeum Museum in Hartford, Conn., the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the San Francisco Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Birmingham Museum of Art in Alabama. In South Carolina, his work is in the Greenville County Museum of Art and the Columbia Museum of Art, whose acquisition of two Paul Reed paintings was facilitated by if ART owner Wim Roefs. Reed’s work has been in more than 100 solo and group shows, including Modernism & Abstraction: Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum, which traveled nationally from 2000-2002.

Columbia’s Laura Spong (b. 1926) enjoyed her most successful year in 2006, both in terms of sales and critical acclaim. Spong sold more than 30 paintings from her 80th birthday solo exhibition at Gallery 80808 in February 2006, which was accompanied by a 32-page catalogue published by if ART. Spong also had solo exhibitions last year at Carol Saunders Gallery in Columbia and Greenville’s Hampton III Gallery, as well as a retrospective at the University of South Carolina’s McMaster Gallery. She was in a two-person show at Atlanta’s Vinson Gallery and in several group exhibitions in North and South Carolina. In April, she’ll be in a group exhibition at the Greenville County Museum of Art that also will include if ART Gallery artist David Yaghjian.

Greenville’s Katie Walker (b. 1970) was in the 2005 Florence, Italy, Biennale, and recently has been in exhibitions at the Upstairs Gallery in Tryon, N.C., Sandler Hudson Gallery in Atlanta, the Spartanburg (S.C.) Museum of Art, the Carillon Building in Charlotte, N.C., the Artbomb in Greenville and Brookgreen Gardens in Pawley’s Island, S.C. She was included in New American Paintings No. 40, 2002. Walker holds a BFA in Studio Art from Furman University and an MFA from the University of Georgia.

Sumter native and Columbia resident Mike Williams (b. 1963) recently had a major solo exhibition at Columbia College in Columbia, S.C. Williams is among the state’s most-acclaimed painters and sculptors. In recent years he has had solo exhibitions at Pawleys Island Cheryl Newby Gallery, I. Pinckney Simons Gallery in Beaufort, S.C., and at Newberry College in Newberry, S.C, Francis Marion University in Florence, S.C., and the University of South Carolina Upstate in Spartanburg, S.C.

Tuesday, January 2, 2007

Works of Art: Paul Reed

All works of art by Paul Reed are available at if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln Street, Columbia, SC.

Contact Wim Roefs at if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com or (803) 255-0068/(803) 238-2351.
# 12, 1964
Acrylic on canvas, 22 x 22 in., $ 4,500






# 9A, 1964, acrylic on canvas
21 x 21 in., $ 4,200











#8A, 1964
Acrylic on canvas, 22 x 20 in., $ 4,200







































#16J, 1963
Acrylic on canvas, 31 x 31 in., $ 8,600




















#17F, 1963, acrylic on canvas
21 x 22 in., $ 4,300



CKW, 2002
Acrylic on muslin, 27 x 20 in., $ 1,000











GDWF, 2004
Acrylic on muslin
26 x 17 in., $ 950
GGR, 2004, acrylic on muslin
20 x 16 in., $ 650


GJE, 2004
Acrylic on muslin
30 x 18 in., $ 1,050












































GLM, 2005
Acrylic on muslin
28 x 19 in., $ 1,000

GLN, 2005
Acrylic on muslin
28 x 18 in., $ 1,000




































GLQ, 2005
Acrylic on muslin, 26 x 18 in.
$ 1,000
GMV, 2005
Acrylic on muslin
30 x 19 in.
$ 1,050













GIJ, 2004
Acrylic on muslin
20 x 14 in., $ 700
Parsee, 1998
Acrylic on canvas, 12 x 12 in., $ 500


#18 L, 1965
Acrylic on canvas, 27 x 20 1/2 in.
$ 3,000













DRAA, 1998
Acrylic on canvas, 12 x 12 in., $ 500










































Tatar, 1998
Acrylic on canvas, 12 x 12 in., $ 500
Turkoman, 1998
Acrylic on canvas, 12 x 12 in., $ 500








































































































All works of art by Paul Reed are available at if ART Gallery, 1223 Lincoln Street, Columbia, SC.

Contact Wim Roefs at if-art-gallery@sc.twcbc.com or (803) 255-0068/(803) 238-2351.