David Reed
Works on Paper
Peter Blum is pleased to announce the exhibition David Reed: Works on Paper, opening on January 13th at 99 Wooster Street, New York. The gallery will hold a reception for the artist on Wednesday, January 13th from 6 to 8 p.m.
On view are over 60 recent working
drawings and color studies. This is the first exhibition of David Reed at Peter
Blum Gallery, and the first exhibition of Reed’s working drawings and color
studies anywhere.
Well-known for his abstract
paintings, the working drawings and color studies provide a rare glimpse into
David Reed’s process and contemplations. The color studies display Reed’s
experiments with color, light, and form. Works such as Color Study #27
exhibit his signature winding, wrapping, rhythmic ribbon-like shapes, and lay
the groundwork for the paintings. While the working drawings, ultimately,
provide a kind of diary of the artist and each painting, recording Reed’s
deliberations and struggles with the work over days, or even years. For
example, in Working Drawing #295-3 Reed writes, “3/19 Thought at first
that this would work – no longer sure.” Likewise, they contain a biographic and
personal element, chronicling events in Reed’s life, from studio visits to
protests occurring outside his window. Made on grid paper, the working drawings
possess the qualities of an architectural drawing with schematics outlining
compositions and dimensions, or a scientific journal with detailed notes on
decisions made regarding color. Just as Reed turns his paintings as he works,
he turns the drawings, resulting in writing that is at times upside down or
sideways.
In these works on paper, working
through his written notes, Reed visually analyzes the formulas for blending
paints and layering glazes by painting the color studies directly on single or
multiple sheets of paper.
David Reed has exhibited
extensively internationally. His work was included in the 1975 and 1989 Whitney
Biennial Exhibitions, while recent group exhibitions include Sammlung
Reloaded at the Kunstmuseum Bonn, and Das Kapital. Blue Chips and
Masterpieces at the Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt. Solo exhibitions
include David Reed – You Look Good in Blue, at Kunstmuseum St. Gallen
and Kunstverein Hannover; David Reed Paintings: Motion Pictures at the
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, which traveled to the Wexner Center for
the Arts, the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University and P.S.1 Contemporary Art
Center, New York.
For
additional information and photographic material please contact Yana Balson at
soho@peterblumgallery.com.

