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Overview

Pilar Corrias is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by Robert Reed, opening across both gallery spaces on 9 June 2022.

Pilar Corrias is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by Robert Reed, opening across both gallery spaces on 9 June 2022. The show presents work from two of the six distinct series in the artist’s oeuvre: Plum Nellie at Savile Row, and Galactic Journal at Eastcastle Street. 

Articulated over a number of large canvases and smaller monotypes, drawings and collages, the Plum Nellie series, begun in the early 1970s, holds strict forms in playful counterpoint. A selection of larger works was presented in Reed’s eponymous 1973 solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. The artist began to work with some of the forces he encountered as a student in his first outdoor landscape experience at Yale’s Norfolk programme. “For me these are landscapes… when I begin to make moves in a painting, I am basing them on some reaction to a landscape space.” Plum nellie is an expression Reed heard growing up in the South, with the elder generation using it as an expression for “damn near.” As he recalled, one day he was mixing colours for a painting, trying to think of a title and began saying to himself, “Oh, it’s not there yet. Not there. Plum nellie…”

The artist worked on his Galactic Journal series in the 1990s and early 2000s. Dynamic compositions of circles, spheres, spirals and bands are held within a taut, diagrammatic containment, so that the vivid areas of colour and form evoke a universe in a delicate balance of expansion and contraction. In Reed’s words, the paintings are all “related to an experience that I had in the past, currently have or wish to have… and that for me is my journal… so charged with experiences.”

An abstract painter, who realised his personal experiences into vibrant compositions of geometric form, Reed lived and worked in New Haven, Connecticut, for much of his life. A student of Josef Albers, he later took up teaching himself, joining Yale School of Art in 1969 as its first African American tenured professor, remaining there until the end of his life. He has been acknowledged as leaving a profound and lasting influence on successive generations of emerging artists.

Despite teaching full time, Reed maintained an active studio practice, producing a body of work that included paintings, collages, prints and ‘constructions’. Employing the deeply personal iconography the artist developed during his lifetime, the Plum Nellie ‘landscapes’ and Galactic Journal ‘paths’ serve as autobiographical excavations of his personal experience. Many of the works in this exhibition are filled with hidden colour codes in an attempt “to organise fragments, paths, cultural and universal signs and symbols, remembered childhood images and places into a pictorial stew of his life,” as the artist himself explained.

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