JOE RICE A Life in ART (1918 - 2011)
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Four self-portraits - Joe Rice 1918 - 2011

12/23/2015

 
On the eve of my father's birthday, December 24, when he would have turned 97, I offer a series of his self-portraits that span forty years. 
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Joe Rice, self-portrait, 1960s
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Joe Rice, self-portrait, 1990s
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Joe Rice, self-portrait, 1988
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Joe Rice, self-portrait, 1999
"The later self-portraits don’t hold the viewer at an impersonal distance, as does The Green Man, his earliest self-portrait. In a 1988 likeness, my father appears contemplative and content, almost blissful, rendered in warm blues, yellows, and browns that blend with the soft landscape.
 
There are two final self-portraits, both from ten years later. Frustration and anger are evident in the dissatisfied curl of the lips, the dark reddened eyes, his slumped posture, and the defensive tuck of his chin. My father glowers from the canvas. I imagine clenched fists beyond the frame. His eyesight was worsening and his hands stiff with arthritis. There is the sense of throwing paint at the canvas before it’s too late, before he no longer can. The image is universal. The subject might be any old man, bitter and beaten, witness to his own decline, to the inexorable loss of self by slow humbling degrees. Time had run out. Any remaining plans, any hopes or dreams for this life, would remain unrealized. 

My father’s face on the eve of his 80th birthday, captured with unblinking honesty,is heartbreaking. It is also a crowning artistic achievement. All the years of serial bouquets and figure studies had led to this: an expansion in his artistic vision and capacity that my father pursued in typical inward fashion, unconcerned with what others might think. 


                                                      excerpt from: The Reluctant Artist: Joe Rice 1918 - 2011
                                                      available from Shanti Arts Publishing

                                                      40% off through December 31, code HOLIDAY40
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PictureJoe Rice, self-portrait sketch, 1990s



​"I miss the dry snap of his morbid humor, his once keen eye, the rare compliment, and the rarer touch. It occurs to me that the thin drawn line of his mouth, the way his lips curved ever so slightly downward at the corners, telegraphing cynical amusement or displeasure, was perhaps just the way they came together, nothing more sinister or meaningful than that.
 

My father was an artist. He didn’t make a living at it. He made a life."

       The Reluctant Artist: Joe Rice 1918 - 2011
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<<Previous
    The Green Man
    Joe Rice remembered

    Rice was a little-known artist. By choice. 
    The Green Man is a self-portrait  from the 1960s. It's a pretty good likeness. Rice was an artist first, a father, teacher and whatever else, after that. He was also inventive, dogged, abidingly humble, and, in his own quiet way, an inspiration to those who knew him. ​

    Dorothy Rice writes things
    . Her first book, The Reluctant Artist: Joe Rice (1918-2011) is an art book/memoir about her father, Joe Rice, whose lifelong dedication to his art, with no interest in finding an audience, both inspires and mystifies. Visit her author website here.
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