|
Donn Russell is one of Nantucket Island's most
acclaimed artists. The painter / printer / sculptor was born in 1929 in Braintree,
Mass. of an art-minded family. His talent for drawing and painting was recognized
early and while still a teenager, he enrolled in the Boston Museum of Art School on
scholarship. He also studied piano and vocal singing, and during the years of World
War II became a crooner on the nationally syndicated CBS weekly broadcast, Youth on
Parade out of Boston's local radio affiliate station WEEI on Saturday mornings.
Weekends were spent entertaining at bond drives in theaters and traveling to
surrounding military camps and hospitals, often in tow with Hollywood celebrities
like Ida Lupino and others traveling the famed Hollywood Stage Door Canteen
circuit.
That stint on radio and its accompanying personal
appearances led to private tutoring and eventual acceptance in the Boston
University College of Music, where he majored in musicology, earning part of his
tuition costs by choir singing in local Back Bay churches and solo stints at
weddings and concerts in and around the Hub, sometimes accompanying himself on the
piano as well. He came by his talent naturally. Family on both sides contained
serious musicians, and two of them, an aunt on his father's side who studied to
be an opera singer and an uncle on his mother's side who became a choral master
and tenor soloist, both had careers in the field. All members either sang or played
instruments or both at every subsequent family get-together.
In 1965, Russell co-founded the Peg Santvoord Foundation
for the performing arts in memorium, after that close friend's untimely death
in a plane crash in the Virgin Islands. It vowed to carry on her entrepreneurial
interests by supporting non-traditional stage and film productions as well as
funding workshops for new dance and musical enterprises. In April 2011 he and the
foundation were honored for their lifelong devotion to evolving arts at a gala 25th
anniversary celebration of Dixon Place in lower Manhattan that received its first
grant from them. A book by Russell detailing those early exuberant years,
'AVANT-GUARDIAN: 1965-1990. A Theater Foundation Director's Twenty-Five
Years Off Broadway' was published in 1997, and became a reference staple of New
York City's Library of Performing Arts at Lincoln Center and the Yale Drama
School Library, among others. The initial book signing party was hosted on the
Lower East Side of New York at La MaMa Experimental Theater Club by its charismatic
founder and director, New Orleans born Ellen Stewart. (And true to her unorthodox
style, all the waiters were young petty crime prisoners doing time at Rikers
Island, where she was fostering a culinary arts program.) She donated rare early
theatrical posters for 'An Evening With Donn Russell' when he appeared the
following summer to lecture on the book at a sell-out Nantucket theater charity
benefit.
Russell's early training in music developed into a
lifelong love and appreciation of it. For many years until the onset of weakening
eyesight, he practiced on his piano every morning, and attended concerts at
Carnegie Hall and Met opera performances in New York often thereafter. (In fact
most of his own later benevolent gifts were grants for study in colleges of music.)
But it took one summer back at the family Homestead in Medway, Mass., painting and
sketching with his artist mother - with encouragement from her brother who was a
noted successful illustrator - to convince him that he should make art his real
career choice. That fall he enrolled in Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, later studying
at The School of Visual Arts, and finally The Art Students League, NYC.
At first he majored solely in painting, and had early
success in winning top awards at the National Academy in New York City and the
Hartford Atheneum and Silvermine Arts Center in Connecticut. He became a regular
member of the "Waverly Gallery" stable of artists on Washington Square in
Greenwich Village where he now lived. (The gallery owner Mildred Milch's
grandson, the award-winning playwright Kenneth Lonergan wrote the Broadway play
Waverly Gallery in 1999 to honor her, with Estelle Parsons playing her role.
Another character was 'Don', a mediocre artist and arriviste from Boston
trying to muscle in on the territory. The writer swore it was not based on reality
but few were convinced.) Russell also took to displaying his watercolors on the
wrought iron fences around the Square during the annual spring and fall outdoor art
exhibits, winning honors and, better, cash awards. From that exposure, his work was
discovered by the publishing firm of I.B.Fischer and reproduced widely.
He expanded his artistic scope further by taking up
sculpting, using carving tools handed down by his maternal Swedish grandfather, a
professional wood carver. For over ten years he worked in the medium, turning out
satirical pieces that were popular enough to be shown in galleries from Madison
Avenue to London. Photos of them graced the pages of the New Yorker, Time, Life and
Fortune magazines in Irving Trust banking ads that won a New York Illustrators Club
award in 1975. A retrospective exhibit, called 'Donn Russell's Wood
Larks' got a 2-month run in the street floor gallery of the U.S. Plywood
Company's headquarters in Manhattan. Later, photos of the work were regularly
incorporated into the New York Times Book Reviews as illustrations. A Book-on-CD
with the same title followed in 2000.
In 1970 Donn Russell's interests expanded to the
graphic arts and print making, especially silkscreens or 'Serigraphs', an
obsession that would continue for the rest of his artistic career, as illuminated
in the following sections of this website. By then he had built a summer home and
studio on Nantucket Island after numerous earlier visits of short duration. He
began exhibiting his paintings, sculptures and prints with growing success in local
galleries, and in 1979 set up his own print gallery on Old South Wharf in one of
the weathered fishermen's shanties that lined both sides as it thrust out into
Nantucket Bay from downtown. The other shanties were also being converted into arts
and crafts shops and in time it became a thriving focal artistic center.
In over two decades there he gained widespread
recognition, becoming dubbed affectionately 'The Mayor of Old South Wharf',
in no little part for his 15-minute appearance on the hour long TV special
"4th of July on Nantucket" on Channel 5 WCVB Boston in 1989, in which the
program host led the viewer down Russell's storied in-town garden path to a
tour of the interior of his studio and a discussion of the artwork in the loft,
followed at the end by an actual on-site demonstration of screen printing in the
adjoining workshop. The program was repeated the next July. On an equal par with
that was the surprise designation he received from the Artists' Association of
Nantucket in March 2010, of being the only living member among 16 bygone artists to
be honored in a special exhibit of their work called "ICONS: Influential
Artists From The Association's 65-Year History" In his case it was for his
unique output and for inventing his own formula of ink preparation for printing
that challenged fading from age or light.
The winter months during those years were devoted to his
foundation activities in New York City, seeking out exceptional burgeoning talent
in all the facets of public performing for grants, and sometimes even designing
sets and costumes - with widely (and wildly) mixed results. Sculptures were
sketched and executed in his Greenwich Village studio, as well as layout plans for
future serigraphs. But travel was the reward for all those efforts. After turning
20, a major foreign trip was planned for every year thereafter. He briefly kept a
studio (a leaky derelict greenhouse in an immense overgrown rose garden with lovely
light) in suburban Clapham Common, while putting finishing touches on a big
sculpture exhibit for London, a city he came to think of as his spiritual home.
He traipsed all over the European Continent, Middle
East, Mexico, the Orient, South Pacific, Greece, Russia, Turkey, India and North
Africa, to name a few. The culmination was a trip completely around the world in
1989. The photos and sketches from each sojourn became important inspirations for
later work. In 2010, he completed a book about all of that, titled "The Long
and Short of It: Stories From a Lifetime" Looking back, he found, was the
greatest reward of all.
He also found that the past could catch up to the
present. Example: An image from an early Off-Broadway theater poster he created for
the 1972 stage play, "Nourish The Beast", was incorporated as a set
design/prop in the 2013 Hollywood feature film PARANOIA, directed by Robert Luketic
and starring Harrison Ford, Richard Dreyfus and Gary Oldman!
|