Tuesday, February 14, 2012

An Introduction to Wally's 1999 Exhibition by Howard Munce

     In 1999, Wally held his last major exhibition at the Connecticut Graphic Arts Center* in Norwalk, Connecticut.  Called "Walter DuBois Richards: A Career Spanning Seven Decades," it was a collection of his works that ran roughly from the 1920s through the 1980s.  

  Seven Decades Exhibition Cover Back


     I didn't attend the event, instead I was in Costa Rica participating in a college study abroad program at the UCR.  However, I was able to hold onto at least one of the booklets from the exhibition. After re-discovering it, I enjoyed the introduction, biography and interview of WDR so much that I've decided to re-print them over the next three blog entries. 
     Howard Munce, the Honorary President for the Society of Illustrators wrote the introduction.  He skillfully articulates Walter DuBois Richards life and career in a brief but gracious way.  Here it is verbatim from the 1999 exhibition booklet:


Seven Decades Exhibition Intro 1     "For those who erroneously regard illustrators as lesser artists, they can be set straight by perusing the lifetime output of Walter DuBois Richards: Wally.
     There are some illustrators who dream of and speak of the day they can put commercial work behind them and "paint."  Wally Richards never waited for that day; he spent years at a drawing board as an illustrator, then spent every spare day he could manage out of doors doing watercolors and visiting museums. 
     He followed this regimen from his early days in Cleveland through his successful days at the renowned Cooper Studios in New York.  His vacations became painting vacations.
     In 1948, along with colleagues Stevan Dohanos and Hardie Gramatky, he organized the Fairfield Watercolor Group, which consisted of a dozen painters and illustrators who felt as he did about picture making beyond magazine and advertising work.  They met once a month at each other's houses with a new painting and were critiqued by the other eleven.
     Wally was the first president of the group and has never been out of office since.  Many other members have come and,  alas, gone.  Not he.  Meantime, all during his mature years he produced lithographs, an exacting and demanding discipline.  To add to the difficulty of working in reverse, there is the problem of working with greasy soft crayons that must constantly be sharpened and deftly applied to a delicate stone surface.  One needs a sturdy heart and a steady hand in this no-man's land of no erasures.  He has both.  
Seven Decades Exhibition Intro 2     Over the years Wally has recorded many landmark buildings in New Canaan [Connecticut] and environs.  His prints hang in scores of area homes, and he has made Green's Ledge Light in Long Island Sound his personal model.  He has rendered this landmark in all the many moods that sky and water and weather can offer.  His ability to portray expanses of water in any medium is unique.  In addition to capturing the many looks of the sea's surface, he is also able to express the mighty lift and swell of it.
     Still another of Wally's accomplishments is his contribution to the U.S. Postal Design Program.  He has designed and executed 37 stamps.  
     Now at the age of 92, Wally is hampered a bit by sight problems but that hasn't stopped him from working or teaching or zeroing in on the weakness or the strength of the output of others.
     Welcome to the work of a superb talent expended to the nth degree."  
     - Howard Munce, Honorary President, Society of Illustrators


*I looked and did not find a website for the Graphic Arts Center in Norwalk.  I did find the following description on an unrelated website:  "The Connecticut Graphics Arts Center was founded in 1995 as a non-profit, multi-media studio workshop and gallery devoted to the creation of original prints, photographs, artists' books and related disciplines through its year-round workshops conducted by nationally recognized master printers.  Visitors may see changing exhibitions, and view artists making prints.  Free."  The Connecticut Graphic Arts Center is located in Mathews Park, 299 West Avenue, Norwalk, CT.


2 comments:

  1. Thanks for the blogs on WDR. I have a small collection of his works; 5 lithos (including the above illustrated "Fog at Greens Ledge"), a signed first day cover, and the original advertising guache for a TWA ad. Still need a lino cut and a water color.

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    1. Thanks for the comment. I would loooooove to see the gouache ad for TWA. If you could send me a quick snap shot of it to my email atrakadrew@gmail.com, it would be much appreciated. I may be able to dig up some info on it. Take care - Andrew

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