|  Paul Keene, Variation on a Flute Player, 1985, acrylic on paper, James A. Michener Art Museum. |
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October 1 through December 31, 2005
Fred Beans Gallery, Doylestown
Sponsored in memory of Robert V. Nesi.
Paul Keene: His Art and Legacy was an exploration of the remarkable
career of this Philadelphia-born artist, a self-described "abstract realist"
whose story reflects both the accomplishments and the difficulties of
African American artists in the twentieth century. The exhibit was curated
by Curlee Raven Holton, Professor of Art at Lafayette College in Easton,
Pennsylvania, and author of the exhibition catalogue by the same name.
Color serves as the compositional key in the works of painter Paul Keene,
who works primarily with acrylic paints on paper. His window scenes and
landscape studies demonstrate his skillful manipulation of scale, color,
light, and atmosphere. Keene often utilizes grid compositions, juxtaposed
against the concentric circles of radiating color which he considers his
"unconscious" personal symbol.
Keene was part of an important group of Philadelphia painters who helped
to tell the stories of African Americans through imagery that combined ancient
cultural traditions with a distinctly modern, urban point of a view.
These artists explored personal narratives as well as the stories of
the city and its inhabitants. In his work, Keene has created new icons of
black urban life with his anonymous portraits of jazz musicians, and
documented the movement and vitality of city life.
Keene himself has said of his approach to painting: "I simply need to
find the means by which I can render visible my vision of my inner world,
as well as my visual interaction with urban anxieties."
Paul Keene was born in 1920 in Philadelphia. His early years at the
Philadelphia Museum School of Art (now University of the Arts;
from 1939-41) and later his study at the Académie Julien in Paris
(1948-52) were grounded in the traditions of the great European masters.

Paul Keene, Orpheus Series, 1997, collage on panel, 22 x 30 inches,
Courtesy of the Keene family.
Keene had served in the United States Army Air Corps from 1941 to 1945,
and was awarded a John Hay Whitney Fellowship to Haiti in 1953. After
studying and teaching there, he returned to Pennsylvania in 1954 where
he began teaching at the Philadelphia College of Art (now the University
of the Arts). In 1958 Keene and his family moved to Warrington, Bucks County;
with the help of an architect friend they remodeled a barn on land given
to Paul and Laura by his parents. In 1960 he was promoted to Associate
Professor of Art at the Philadelphia College of Art. He remained there
until 1969, when he left to become a full-time professor at Bucks County
Community College in Newtown, Pennsylvania, where he helped to establish
a new art department. He retired from teaching in 1985 and took up
his brushes full time.
In addition to the Michener Art Museum, Keene's work is in the
collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Dallas Museum of Art,
Tucson Museum of Art, and the Woodmere Art Museum, among others.
"Keene's greatest legacy," Holton writes, "will be not only his exceptional
works of art but also his humanity and his faith in the potential of
each individual to express his or her particular genius."
A L S O S E E
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