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Ruth Ray

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Nationality
  
American

Known for
  
painting


Name
  
Ruth Ray

Movement
  
Ruth Ray wwwruthrayartistcomimagesmoon120Smalljpg


Born
  
November 8, 1919 (
1919-11-08
)
New York City, New York

Died
  
1977, Darien, Connecticut, United States

Education
  
Barnard College, Swarth College

Ruth Ray (1919–1977) was an American painter in the Magic Realism style. Educated at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Art Students League of New York, she drew inspiration from the horses and farm life of New England.

Contents

Ruth Ray The Mystical Horse Art of Ruth Ray

Biography

Ruth Ray 125 best Ruth Ray images on Pinterest Oil on canvas Unicorns and

Ruth Ray was born in 1919 into a sophisticated New York City household. Her mother was an early feminist, a managing editor of Vogue, and a prolific author of self-help books. Ray attended Swarthmore College, Barnard College, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and the Art Students League of New York. In 1948, she married and established a home in Darien, Connecticut. She had a successful career as a commercial artist and portraitist; among her most famous portraits was the golfer Sam Snead. However, her passion was an idiosyncratic form of Magic realism inspired by her love of horses, New England farm life, and the Maine seacoast.

Works

Ruth Ray Ruth Ray Works on Sale at Auction Biography

Inspired by the surrealists but demonstrating a cultivated sense of restraint in the depiction of her subject matter, Ray juxtaposed the ordinary with the fantastical. "Her art might be called a rational surrealism," opined the critic Frederic Whitaker in 1957. "Some of her paintings suggest the skill of a Dalí with his irritating shock elements omitted." Ray's paintings are in the collections of several museums, including the National Art Museum of Sport, the National Academy of Design, and the Sheldon Museum of Art. Her "Swordsplay" (1962) numbers among the illustrations in "The Personality of the Horse." In her 2012-2013 exhibition, "Her Own Style: An Artist's Eye," curator Judith Shea selected Ray's "Self-Portrait" (1962) as one of thirty-three female artists' self-portraits from among the collection of the National Academy Museum.

Awards

Ruth Ray The Mystical Horse Art of Ruth Ray

Among her various awards, Ray received the Alger Prize in 1944 for "Portrait of a Young Actor" and the American Artist Magazine Medal of Honor in 1956.


Ruth Ray Ruth Ray American Artist Ruths Art Style

References

Ruth Ray Wikipedia