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An
Artist Guarding the Art
Once
you get beyond the stereotypes, being an artist and running an art
museum are not mutually exclusive vocations. As the new director
of the Yale University Art Gallery, Jock Reynolds does both -- and
plays a little rugby on the side.
May
1999
by Mark Alden Branch
One of
the main things Jock Reynolds wants to do
for the Yale University
Art Gallery is get more people inside it. Reynolds, who became
director of the gallery last August, believes that it could do a
lot better than its current annual attendance figure of about 115,000.
"Unless
one constantly says 'welcome,'" says Reynolds, "people tend to think
of this as a private place. We need to improve our sense of greeting."
To that end, he plans to put an information desk at the building's
front door and "rotate all the staff through there -- including
me.
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"What
I do as museum director is always intellectually engaging.
The way we think about art isn't so different from what
I do here," says Reynolds.
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"The best
way to build attendance is on the ground," says the director. "It's
a person-to-person effort with lots of time spent making connections."
Reynolds
speaks from experience, having spent nine years as director of the
Addison
Gallery of American Art at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts.
There, he built a community outreach program that helped increase
the annual number of visitors to the Addison from 9,000 to 65,000.
What's
more, Reynolds feels he accomplished this without compromising the
Addison's primary mission as a teaching museum, a fact that bodes
well for a gallery whose directors have not always been able to
satisfy students as well as the public. "I don't see any conflict
in balancing Yale's needs with the community's," says Reynolds,
who adds that he is counting on a planned expansion to help relieve
space pressures that sometimes force the gallery to choose between
its constituencies.
Expanding
the museum and making it more inviting are just two of the many
things on Jock Reynolds's "to do" list. A working artist
who collaborates regularly with his wife, Suzanne Hellmuth, Reynolds
is accustomed to a busy life. But since taking over as director
of the gallery last August, he has discovered how much time it takes
to operate a museum with 71 employees and 86,000 works of art. When
he is not on the road meeting with potential donors, his days are
tightly packed with obligations within the gallery and across the
University. Coming to a museum that spent a year without a director
(Helen Cooper, the gallery's curator of American painting, served
as acting director) after the departure of African art specialist
Susan Vogel in 1997, Reynolds is advancing plans for the gallery's
expansion, for extended outreach and education programs, and for
increased involvement with contemporary art and artists.
One might
expect such bureaucratic and administrative details to be intolerable
distractions for a practicing artist, but Reynolds dismisses the
stereotype of the creative person as an outsider or rebel making
art in the quiet vacuum of the studio. "There are a lot of myths
about who artists are and how they're supposed to behave," he says.
Reynolds,
a genial 51-year-old Californian who favors the preppy uniform of
gray trousers and blue blazer, disproves many of those myths. He
is unapologetically comfortable in places like Andover and Yale,
having grown up in the shadow of the University of California at
Davis, where his father was a professor of microbiology. (His wife's
father was an economics professor at Oberlin College.) "As faculty
brats, we have an appreciation and understanding of institutions,"
Reynolds says.
Their
interest in institutions has informed much of the art he and Hellmuth
have created, which often employs archival photographs dealing with
the history of places as diverse as the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and a Carnegie library in Braddock, Pennsylvania.
The exploration of such worlds, Reynolds explains, is part of their
life and work. "What I do as museum director is always intellectually
engaging," he says. "If what I did was draw all day, and this job
meant I couldn't draw all day, I'd be frustrated. But the way we
think about art isn't so different from what I do here."
Reynolds
was trained in a time when the definition of art was undergoing
a dramatic expansion. After attending secondary school at
Andover, a school that he says "considers visual intelligence to
be important and meaningful," he returned to California, taking
his BA from the University of California at Santa Cruz and his MFA
in sculpture from UC-Davis. "Suzanne and I came into a time of great
interaction among artists," he says. "We were part of the first
generation of Baby Boomer artists, and we came from colleges that
were started after World War II. Being trained in liberal arts universities
allowed us to be more fluid, and as a result the boundaries between
disciplines were very permeable."
Moving
to San Francisco after graduation, Reynolds soon became involved
in the city's art scene. He met Hellmuth, who was trained as a dancer,
when he began working with a dance company with which she was connected.
The pair soon collaborated on a series of performance and visual
theater projects and became a couple, marrying in 1977 and settling
in a loft in the South of Market district along with a number of
other artists.
Their
performance collaborations led indirectly to the work with photography
for which they are best known. "In figuring out how to document
those pieces," says Hellmuth, "we got to thinking about what is
included and what is left out of any visual document." That thinking
led to a series of projects using photographs -- their own and others
culled from archives -- in provocative juxtapositions. In the most
ambitious of these projects, called "State of the Union," Hellmuth
and Reynolds pored through public archives and newspaper morgues
in California, rephotographing 25,000 images selected from more
than 300,000 they looked at. They then composed the images, often
in pairs or sets of three or more, to highlight relationships of
form or content. In some cases, pieces of a photo were enlarged
and reused elsewhere on a page, or certain portions of an image
were over- or underprinted to emphasize aspects of a picture that
might otherwise go unnoticed.
Meanwhile,
Reynolds was teaching at California State University in San Francisco
and, starting in 1975, working with 80 Langton Street (now New
Langton Arts), an alternative artists' space he co-founded.
In 1983, Hellmuth and Reynolds moved to Boston for a year when they
received a commission from MIT to create an installation there.
The installation, titled "Speculation," explored the Institute's
role in the development of radar and its continued relationship
with the defense industry. In the work, the artists combined photographs -- projected, in this case -- with model airplanes, tips of missiles,
and other artifacts from MIT's archives.
After
the foray into two dimensions of "State of the Union" and other
photography projects, Hellmuth and Reynolds were again working with
space and three-dimensional environments. "I'm interested in how
people enter and leave space -- and how they read a space," says
Hellmuth. "Jock's interested in that too, as a sculptor. He's a
rugby player, and that's all about figuring out where the space
is and where the holes are."
After
working on "Speculation," Reynolds and Hellmuth (who by then were
the parents of two sons, Gurdon and Will) moved to Washington, D.C.,
where Reynolds ran the Washington
Project for the Arts. During his six years there, he organized
a number of art events, including a major multidisciplinary project
about Vietnam titled "War and Memory."
In 1989,
Reynolds became director of the Addison
Gallery at Andover, a 68-year-old collection that now includes
12,000 works, from Colonial times to the present. During his nine-year
stint as director, he pumped energy into the Addison's programs,
organizing and curating a number of exhibitions by contemporary
artists and launching an active publications program. He also led
a multimillion-dollar renovation of the building and expanded the
collection.
Remarkably,
Reynolds managed to continue collaborating with Hellmuth
on installations and other projects during his busy years in Washington
and Andover. The pair had a mid-career retrospective that was mounted
on three University of California campuses in 1986, and in 1987
they produced a haunting installation in Graz, Austria, that dealt
with the Holocaust. Titled "In Memory -- A Bird in the Hand,"
the exhibit was an arrangement of archival photographs and artifacts
in the manner of the MIT exhibit.
Most
recently, in 1995, they moved further afield, producing a work that
combined public art, architecture, photography, and conceptual art
for the campus of the University of Washington in Seattle. The heart
of the project was a self-guided tour of trees on the campus that
had been published 15 years earlier by a forestry professor there
named C. Frank Brockman. (The campus is known for its unusual variety
of trees.) Hellmuth and Reynolds produced an updated booklet on
the tour, using Brockman's own photographs, and designed a pair
of bus shelters (each of which frames a massive Deodar Cedar tree)
and an information center at the start of the tour. But while the
tree tour is in some ways a departure from their usual emphasis
on photography, it corresponds to most other themes in their work -- it directs people through a physical space and engages them with
the history of an institution.
Reynolds
sees the work that he and Hellmuth do as a reaction to what they
feel is the visual overload of contemporary culture. "It's mind-boggling,"
he says. "People are having to navigate through barrages of visual
information. Our work is a reflection of the time we're living in.
How do you read that landscape of images?"
When
their work is seen in this light, the gap between Reynolds the working
artist and Reynolds the museum director begins to disappear. Curating
an exhibition or hanging a permanent collection require the same
kind of aesthetic and intellectual judgments Hellmuth and Reynolds
apply to their work. "For the best curators, it's not just about
scholarship and wall panels," says Reynolds. "They have a poetic
visual sense of how things go together. One of the great pleasures
of creating exhibits for me is that it's a compositional problem."
Reynolds
will have ample compositional problems to solve in the coming years
at the Art Gallery. While a major expansion is in the works
as part of a larger plan for the University's "Arts Area," which
also includes the Center for British
Art and the Schools of Art, Architecture, and Drama, the Gallery
is not waiting to acquire more real estate before making changes.
This summer, the galleries on the second and third floors will be
switched to create a more sensible chronological progression through
the building. Ancient art will remain in the ground floor gallery,
but the new arrangement will place the collection of Renaissance
art and European art up to the 19th century on the second floor.
The 19th-century European works and early modern art will be moved
to the third floor, where the early modern works from Europe will
connect to the existing American art galleries. In the fall, the
28-year-old installation of American painting and decorative arts
will be reconfigured.
Reynolds
also expects the permanent collections to be less permanent, at
least in their location. One of the first staff changes he made
was to hire more art handlers so that the collections can be rotated
more regularly. "Museums are trying more and more to keep their
collections in dynamic play," he explains.
The gallery
is also hoping to increase the size and depth of that collection
during Reynolds's tenure. The effort got a boost last fall when
the gallery received an $8-million bequest from the estate of Essex,
Connecticut, artist Simeon Braguin. Interest on the gift is to be
used, according to Braguin's will, to purchase works by living American
artists. The Gallery is also embarking on a "Tercentennial Art Drive"
in which "a number of friends will give important works of art,
whether to fill holes or build strength on strength," according
to Reynolds.
More
art, of course, will require more room. Reynolds hopes to
gain more exhibit space for the gallery through a proposed expansion
into the two adjacent buildings -- the Old Art Gallery and Street
Hall -- which are now occupied in part by the history of art department.
While the Arts Area plan is still tentative, the expansion drawings
that cover the walls of Reynolds's office show the gallery occupying
all three buildings, with the 1953 building by Louis Kahn emptied
of administrative functions and filled with art. (The history of
art department may move to a new building north of the Art
& Architecture Building.)
But the
gallery will still need space to provide access to material that
is not on public view but that is of use to scholars, students,
and other visitors. Reynolds hopes to realize a long-discussed plan
to build a study center for American decorative arts and for large-scale
contemporary art. The center, which would ideally be within walking
distance of the gallery, would also contain additional non-public
functions.
Reynolds
also hopes to attract more undergraduates to the gallery, continuing
a mission he had at Andover to involve more students. "You can't
believe how many times I've heard art collectors -- both Yale alums
and before that Andover alums -- tell me they never even went into
the art gallery when they were students. They say, 'I don't know
how I missed it but I did.'" Already, a student-initiated effort
has led to the establishment of a corps of undergraduate gallery
guides who give tours to their fellow students and other visitors.
Reynolds
is also eager to bring more contemporary artists and art to the
gallery. "We sit so neatly between the history of art department
and the School of Art, and that illustrates the need for a balance
between historical and contemporary art," says Reynolds. "But I'd
like to adjust that balance and engage the gallery more directly
with contemporary art."
For example,
the gallery has enhanced its current show on Chinese scholars' rocks
(which runs through June 13) with related work by two contemporary
artists: drawings by Brice Marden '63MFA, which are heavily influenced
by his having seen such rocks in Chinese gardens, and photographs
of Chinese landscapes by Lois Conner '81MFA.
All these
concerns, in addition to the time he still spends teaching (he has
a dual appointment in the School of Art and the history of art department)
and curating outside exhibitions, have left Reynolds with a full
plate. In addition, he and his wife are now looking for a place
to live in New Haven, preferably downtown in the kind of artist's
loft they favored in San Francisco. While Hellmuth and son Will
are still living in Andover until Will graduates from high school
there next month, Reynolds is spending a year in an apartment above
Claire's
Corner Copia on Chapel Street, amid stacks of boxes and makeshift
furnishings cast off by the history of art department.
His
year as a resident of New Haven has left Reynolds with a positive
view of the city as a home for artists and art lovers. "We
were in San Francisco and Washington when things were just taking
off there, and I expect a similar resurgence around the cultural
amenities in New Haven. It's something you can just smell. I know
of no other city in America -- per capita -- that has the resources
this one does."
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