Philip Reeves RSA 1931-2017
The Royal Scottish Academy has significant holdings of paintings, collages and prints by the enormously influential artist Philip Reeves (1931-2017).
Philip Reeves brought the tenets of European Modernism to Scottish art, creating collages and prints that centre on the formation of shape, line and colour. Known for his economy of form and appropriation of scrap materials, Reeves was a virtuosic printmaker and is credited with reinvigorating the practice in Scotland. Vitally important in the elevation of the status of printmaking from that of a craft to that of an art form in Scotland.
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Philip Reeves RSAVertical Centrepiece, c. 2009emulsion paint on wood assemblage110 x 107
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Philip Reeves RSAAwning, 1996Aquatint53 x 67 cmEdition of 10
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Philip Reeves RSA4 Cooling Towers, 1973Aquatint and scraper. 2 plates/ Printed in blue and ochre57.5 x 82.6Edition of 10
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Philip Reeves RSAAssociate GroupMixed media collage77 x 70 cm
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Philip Reeves RSAReefGouache collage37 x 89 cm£ 3,500.00
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Philip Reeves RSAStudies for the Old Pier North Berwickpen and ink sketchbook pages34 x 27
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Philip Reeves RSAThe Hilletching36 x 43
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Philip Reeves RSATract IIMixed media15 x 11 cm
Philip Reeves RSA was born in Cheltenham in 1931. His father was a commercial printer and sympathetic toward his ambitions to go to art school. Reeves attended Cheltenham School of Art before undertaking National Service (1949-51) which he served firstly with the 8th Royal Tank Regiment and then with the 4th/7th Royal Dragoon Guards in Libya. Whilst in the army Reeves carried a small sketchbook and pen behind his paybook in his top pocket in which he drew army bases and tanks.
On completion of his National Service, Reeves gained a scholarship to study at the Royal College of Art (RCA), London, where he was taught by the esteemed printmaker Robert Austin. John Bratby and Edward Middleditch, exponents of the ‘kitchen sink school’ that favoured a style of gritty realism, were Reeves’ contemporaries, as well as Bridget Riley. He also came under the influence of Eric Ravilious and Paul Nash, both of whom carried the torch for a Modernist sensibility in Britain. Despite these Modernist influences, during his time at the RCA Reeves produced etchings of London cityscapes in what he described as a ‘very traditional’ style.
Coming to the end of his course at the RCA in 1954, Reeves gained a job teaching etching at Glasgow School of Art (GSA). He would go on to become a Senior Lecturer and Head of Printmaking at the school in 1970, teaching at the school until his retirement in 1991. The reach of Reeves’ influence during his long tenure at GSA is evident in the high regard placed on him by his students, many of whom have themselves gone on to receive great acclaim.
Reeves was elected an Associate of the Royal Scottish Academy in 1971 and an Academician in 1976. He was also an active member of the Society of Scottish Artists and the Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine Arts. He served as a president of the Royal Society of Scottish Painters in Watercolour and was a fellow of the Royal Society of Painters, Etchers and Engravers. A major retrospective of his work was mounted in 2001 jointly at the Talbot Rice Gallery, Edinburgh, and the Hunterian, Glasgow. His work is included in the collections of the British Museum; the Fleming Collection; Glasgow Art Galleries and Museums; Aberdeen Art Gallery; Edinburgh University; Art in Healthcare; and Glasgow School of Art.
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Reduct
Abstraction and Geometry in Contemporary Art 25 October - 22 November 2020RSA Lower Galleries Free entry, booking required. The Royal Scottish Academy is pleased to present Reduct: Abstraction and Geometry in Scottish Art. Considering the ways in which non-objective expression remains...Read more -
Scottish Drawings
31 January - 1 March 2015RSA Lower Galleries Free entry An investigation into contemporary drawing by Royal Scottish Academicians and invited artists. The exhibition also fincludes a selection of historic works from the RSA Collections....Read more -
The Curious Eye
14 July - 27 September 2007RSA Friends Room & Library Artists are naturally curious and, in all cultures since cave painting, curiosity about the natural world has been a springing point for the creative imagination....Read more