Sun Patterns, Dark Canyon
Sun Patterns, Dark Canyon: The Paintings and Aquatints of Doel Reed (1894-1985)
July 6 - October 30, 2021
Sun Patterns, Dark Canyon explores the art and career of the highly successful twentieth-century American printmaker and painter Doel Reed (1894-1985). Reed is best known today as a Southwestern artist and "master of the aquatint;” his conservative yet modernist approach to the New Mexican landscape found a ready audience among curators and collectors during his lifetime. Reed began summering in the Taos artists’ colony starting in the 1940s and permanently moved to New Mexico in 1959. The mountainous topography, geology, and history of New Mexico were an endless source of inspiration to Reed. This exhibition will bring attention to this significant but understudied artist and demonstrates how Reed was both influenced by and contributed to national and international artistic trends over his long and prolific career. The rich and varied American landscapes of the Midwest and Southwest were his primary sources of inspiration. Included in the exhibition are over sixty works of art by Doel Reed and his contemporaries. An exhibition catalogue will be available.
Despite the fact that Reed was a nationally recognized artist and educator, whose paintings and especially prints are in the collections of major museums throughout the United States and Europe, no scholarly studies exist on the artist. This exhibition will not only bring attention to Reed’s art and career, it will contribute to knowledge about the development of American art and the embrace of printmaking by leading artists throughout the country. Printmaking started to receive attention as a fine art in the United States during Reed’s lifetime and was only slowly incorporated into university and art academy curricula. Reed was an acknowledged leader in the United States with respect to the technique of aquatint, which reflects his close study of Goya’s masterful graphic work. By focusing on Reed, we also gain insight into the vibrant community of artists throughout the American Southwest and Midwest in the 1930s-1970s and how they responded to and adapted modernist approaches for their own purposes and audiences. His close friends and students included artists as diverse at Birger Sandzén, Ernst Blumenshein, William (Bill) Dickerson, J. Jay McVicker, and Howard Cook, among many others.
Reed exhibited widely throughout his lifetime, won numerous awards, and was elected
a full member of the National Academy of Design in 1952. In 1984, when Reed was 90
years old, his prints were included in no fewer than five national exhibitions in
New York City.
Following its debut at the OSU Museum of Art, Sun Patterns, Dark Canyon will travel to the following museums:
Wichita Art Museum, Wichita, Kansas | November 20, 2021 to February 15, 2022
Taos Art Museum at Fechin House, Taos, New Mexico | May 24, 2022 to August 28, 2022
For further information about Doel Reed visit the Doel Reed Center in Taos.
Guest Curator
Rebecca P. Brienen, Ph.D., Vaughn Vennerberg II Endowed Chair in Art and Professor of Art History, Oklahoma State University
OStateTV
Inside OSU: OSU Museum of Art
Author Conversation
Related Events
- Press & Publications
- Resources
EDUCATOR GUIDE | Sun Patterns, Dark Canyon Teacher Packet
GALLERY GUIDE | Sun Patterns, Dark Canyon Gallery Guide
AQUATINT DEMONSTRATION | Aquatint Demonstration, OSU Professor Mark Sisson, MFA
- Credits
This exhibition has been organized by Oklahoma State University Museum of Art. Support for the catalogue and exhibition has been provided by the Carl and Marilynn Thoma Family Foundation, the Terra Foundation for American Art, Kent and Jeanette Young, the Doel Reed Center, Neal and Lora Buck, the Vaughn Vennerberg II Endowed Chair in Art, Malinda and Dick Fischer, and the OSU Museum of Art Advocates.