Years ago, Eric Key, director of the University of Maryland University College (UMUC) Arts Program, and artist Paul Reed agreed to put on a one-man show of Reed鈥檚 work at the university. Key had visited the painter, one of the founders of the Washington Color School, in his Virginia home to discuss the exhibit, and planning for the solo exhibit had begun. Then Reed called to tell Key that, unfortunately, he didn鈥檛 have time for the one-man show.
鈥淚 found out that he wanted to spend the time taking care of his wife,鈥 Key told the audience鈥攁 聽full-house鈥攁t the opening reception for 鈥Paul Reed: Washington Color School Painter,鈥 on view through Sept. 16 at the UMUC Art Gallery.
鈥淎s disappointing as it may have been not to have the show when he was still with us, I could appreciate the fact that he wanted to take care of his wife.鈥
Key had gotten to know Reed and his wife Esther and sensed how important they were to one another. She died in 2012 and Reed followed in 2015 at age 96. 鈥淚 could tell by his expression that their love was very strong,鈥 Key said.
A 鈥淣ew York Times鈥 obituary for Reed noted that the artist 鈥渃reated luminous fields of color by letting the paint bleed into, or stain, untreated canvas.鈥 These qualities also drew Key to Reed鈥檚 work.
Jean Reed Roberts flanked by UMUC Arts Program Director Eric Key (left) and Curator Jon West-Bey
The story, as far as the UMUC one-man show was concerned, could have ended with Reed鈥檚 passing. But then, Jean Reed Roberts discovered a letter that Key had written to her father about the exhibition and a donation of artworks to the UMUC arts program.
鈥淎fter several conversations, Jean decided to honor that wish,鈥 Key said. 鈥淭oday, we have a large body of work that makes up the Paul and Esther Reed collection鈥攁pproximately 200 works. For that, Jean, thank you.鈥
鈥淧aul鈥檚 favorite thing was teaching. Maybe painting, but he really loved having students,鈥 Roberts said of her father. 鈥淩ight until the end, he was teaching. He would be pleased to know that the work is available to students.鈥
The 200 works gifted to UMUC makes it undoubtedly one of the most extensive and important repositories of the artist鈥檚 work, which is also represented in other major collections. The National Gallery of Art (NGA) in Washington acquired 鈥溾 (1966) in 2011, and the artist was thrilled to have his work in such an important collection. The NGA now owns Reed works, an acrylic and two silkscreens, which came from the Corcoran collection.
Reed, who graduated in 1936 at age 16 from McKinley High School in Washington rode his bicycle every day past the National Gallery site. When the gallery accepted 鈥淐oherence.鈥 Reed said 鈥溾業 used to ride by here every day, and now I鈥檓 one of the big boys. They鈥檙e all here, and I鈥檓 with them,鈥欌 Roberts said.
And one of the 鈥渂ig boys鈥 he certainly was. 鈥淗e was a prolific artist, producing hundreds of paintings and sculptures over the course of his career, which spanned more than 60 years,鈥 wrote UMUC Arts Program Curator Jon West-Bey in an essay for the exhibit catalog. 鈥淗is work is as diverse as it is inventive.鈥
Reed鈥檚 work appears not only in the National Gallery鈥檚 coffers, but also in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the Dallas Museum of Art, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago, West-Bey added. The Phillips Collection was the first to acquire a Reed work in 1965.
Following remarks at the exhibit 鈥榮 opening event from Key and West-Bey, Roberts spoke about her father鈥檚 life and work, nearly without pause for the better part of half an hour. 鈥淚鈥檓 just the artist鈥檚 daughter now,鈥 she began, before revealing an extraordinary grasp of her father鈥檚 history, aesthetic approach and the broader significance of his work. Roberts also said she was considering being brave and taking up an easel and paints, herself, despite having never painted before.
Her father, Roberts said, was the son of two gin bootleggers who owned a Richmond farm that is now part of Robert E. Lee Memorial Park. 鈥淭hey had a fleet of souped-up Hudsons. My grandmother always packed heat. She said she could outrun any sheriff from Virginia to Georgia and apparently enjoyed doing so.鈥
It was amid these humble southern, Scotch-Irish beginnings, that Reed and his sister, also an artist, grew up.
Esther, Reed鈥檚 wife of 73 years and an artist as well, was born into a Russian Jewish family. Roberts said that her mother鈥檚 family disapproved of the intermarriage and likely 鈥渟at shiva鈥 for her鈥攊mplying that the marriage to Reed likely made Esther dead to the family,. 鈥淧aul never forgave them,鈥 Roberts said. 鈥淏ut they forgave her.鈥
Jobs were hard to find during the Depression so Roberts said her parents moved around. In Florida, Reed landed a job as an illustrator. After briefly returning to the Washington area, the couple moved to New York, where Reed worked for prestigious advertising agencies; they subsequently returned to Washington.
Reed designed the American Automobile Association logo鈥攖he iconic three A鈥檚 in an oval. He received the commission 鈥渇rom Gene Davis for $50,鈥 Roberts said. Davis was a fellow artist and close friend who went on to become the first Peace Corps art director鈥攁 job he held until, according to Roberts, President Richard M. Nixon fired him.
Roberts related that, even early on, Reed experimented a great deal but he always did so with great color. His works are on canvas, paper, and Masonite board, and they include enamel, lithographs, oil pastels, and collages.聽鈥淛ust whatever he could find to express himself,鈥 she said.
Reed painted in an old two-story carriage house鈥攍acking heat and air-conditioning鈥攂ehind the Jefferson Hotel. He used to say that he felt safe walking around the area at night, since there were always CIA cars lining the alleyway behind his studio after dark, monitoring the adjacent Russian embassy, Roberts said.
All the while, as he made all kinds of art, Reed remained a lifelong learner. He didn鈥檛 have geometry coursework on his high-school transcript and he never went to college. Even so, his work is so mathematical. 鈥淗e would always ask us for our textbooks, and I believe he read everything we studied,鈥 Roberts said of herself and her husband, Thomas.
鈥淗e [Reed] just always kept learning and kept changing,鈥 Roberts said. And, as the audience filed downstairs to the gallery for wine, hors-d'oeuvres, and to view dozens of Reed鈥檚 works, his thirst for lifelong learning became clear very quickly.
Acrylic on canvas pictures like 鈥淎MAG鈥 (2001) and 鈥淐HO鈥 (2003) evoke the bold, parallel lines of the Bank of America logo, while oil pastels on paper from 1979 juxtapose powerful seas of bright color with whimsical black contour drawings. Others, like 鈥楿pstart XXXIX鈥 (1966) are much more minimalist and graphic.
If one didn鈥檛 know better, one could be forgiven for assuming that this show was a group exhibition reflecting the works of many artists, rather than the product of decades-long experimentation on the part of one very curious and playful painter. But as Roberts pointed out about her father, the tie that binds all was his fascination with color. Reed proved whatever the opposite is of a one-trick pony.
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