dies at 89.
Richard Gray, a Chicago-based art dealer and philanthropist
who became a leading figure on the international art scene,
died at his home May 16, peacefully, in his sleep.
A man of wide-ranging taste whose interests included antiquities
and African art, Gray opened his eponymous gallery in 1963.
Focusing initially on works on paper by both contemporary artists
and noted 20th century modernists, he began to offer paintings
and sculpture by Jules Olitski, Morris Louis, Louise Nevelson, and
Hans Hofmann, among others. In time, the gallery came to be
recognized internationally as a key purveyor of 20th-century art
to museums and prominent private collectors with a roster that
went on to included David Hockney, Willem de Kooning, Roy
Lichtenstein, Jim Dine, Alex Katz, Agnes Martin, Jaume Plensa,
Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, David Smith, and many others.
The business continues under the direction of his son Paul, and
partners Andrew Fabricant and Valerie Carberry, with two
galleries in Chicago and a gallery on Madison Avenue in New York
City.
A lifelong Chicagoan Richard Gray was born December 30, 1928
on the city’s south side. One of seven children, he was the son of
Edward Gray — a Russian-Polish immigrant who owned a
construction services company and Pearl Winehouse, a Chicago
native. After graduating from Hyde Park High School and
assuming he would join his father in business, Gray enrolled as an
engineering student the University of Illinois’ newly opened
campus on Navy Pier. But after a semester, he transferred to the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where he studied
architecture. He interrupted his studies there to join the US Air
Force and was stationed in Europe.
Gray returned to Chicago in 1952 and within months met Mary
Kay Lackritz — a recent Bryn Mawr graduate — on a blind date.
In a 2007 interview with James McElhinney for the Archives of
American Art, Gray recalled the impact the Lackritz home had on
him. “I saw the residence of an obviously educated, cultured
family,” he said, recalling a living room with two pianos, a cello,
walls of books and most importantly, paintings by Miro,
Kandinsky and Jackson Pollock. “I was in a household that spoke
to me in a way that I never had experienced before.” The couple
married in March 1953.
In those early post-war years, Gray worked for his father, first at a
phonographic manufacturing company and then at a summer
resort he had established in Michigan. The idea to open a gallery
came from his friend, artist and critic Harry Bouras, whom Gray
had invited to exhibit at the resort in the summer of 1963. Over
the years, Gray told McElhinney, “I was developing an interest in
visual arts, and I would go to art shows, street fairs, and every
opportunity, you know, to look at things visual.”
With a small space rented at 155 East Ontario Street in Chicago,
Gray set off for New York with $25,000 to assemble an inventory
for his new venture. His first purchases included a de Kooning
collage, an India ink drawing by Arshile Gorky, and a Léger, the
latter acquired from André Emmerich. In a 2008 interview, Gray
remarked, “I went into business with the idea that I would see
how it worked out. I don’t think that I thought there was any
likelihood I would spend my life doing it. But as it turned out I
was pretty good at it and had some breaks.”
Over the years, Gray and his son continued to expand the gallery’s
stable, welcoming many new artists including, just recently,
Theaster Gates. A champion of Spanish artist Jaume Plensa, Gray
offered the sculptor his first significant show in the United States
and the gallery was instrumental in securing a commission for the
artist in Chicago’s Millennium Park.
A past president of the Art Dealers Association of America and the
Chicago Art Dealers Association, Gray was a trustee of the Art
Institute of Chicago, Chicago Humanities Festival, Chicago
Symphony Orchestra, The Goodman Theatre, WTTW, The
Newberry Library, and the Smart Museum at the University of
Chicago, among many other institutions and organizations.
As Vice Chairman of the Friends of the Farnsworth House, he
played a key role in the preservation of the Mies can der Rohe
masterpiece. In 2008, The Art Institute of Chicago opened the
Richard and Mary L. Gray Wing for prints and drawings with
selections from the couple’s personal collection, which comprises
Renaissance- and Baroque-era treasures by Guercino, Tiepolo,
and Rubens; 19th-century works by Delacroix, Degas, and Seurat;
and pieces from such 20th-century artists as Picasso, Matisse, and
Miró. 2013 marked the founding of The Richard and Mary L.
Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry at the University of Chicago.
For a man who masterfully helped many individuals form
impressive private collections, Gray was dismissive of how he
came to assemble his own personal holdings, insisting that the art
in his home was “accumulated”, not collected. As he once told the
New Yorker’s Lawrence Weschler, “At no time…had I ever thought
we were collecting, nor had I ever stopped to seriously compare
myself to the sorts of people I worked with all the time as a
dealer.”
He was equally clear-eyed about his life and career. In his
interview for the Archives of American Art a decade ago, he
stated, “The reality is, sooner or later — but not so much later —
it's all going to be all over for me, and I accept that. I know it. It
doesn't change one iota my ability to continue, every day, to be
active and involved and committed, to gain from everything
around me, what people are doing — artists, musicians, family.”
In addition to his wife of 65 years, Mary, he is survived by his
three children; Paul Gray (Dedrea A. Gray) of Chicago, Jennifer
Gray (Scott Wilkerson) of Evanston IL, Harry Gray (Katrine Keyes
Gray) of El Sobrante, CA and, five grandchildren, Emily (Mark
Wiley), Ian, Caitlin, Asia and Vienna, one great-grandchild,
Maeven, and his brothers, Robert, Jupiter, FL and Melvin (Sue),
Chicago. A memorial service will be announced at a later date.
Donations in his honor will be gratefully received by any of the
many Chicago civic and charitable organizations supported by the
Gray family.
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