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・ Ray Orchard
・ Ray Osrin
・ Ray Owen
・ Ray Owes
・ Ray Oyler
・ Ray Ozzie
・ Ray P. Chase
・ Ray P. Dinsmore
・ Ray Paczkowski
・ Ray Pahl
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・ Ray Parker (footballer)
Ray Parker (painter)
・ Ray Parker, Jr.
・ Ray Parkin
・ Ray Parkin (footballer)
・ Ray Parlour
・ Ray Parry
・ Ray Patterson (animator)
・ Ray Patterson (basketball)
・ Ray Pawson
・ Ray Peacock
・ Ray Pelfrey
・ Ray Pennick
・ Ray Pennington
・ Ray Pentland
・ Ray Pepper


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Ray Parker (painter) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ray Parker (painter)

Raymond Parker was born in 1922 and he died in 1990. He was known as an Abstract expressionist painter who also is associated with Color Field painting and Lyrical Abstraction. Ray Parker was an influential art teacher and an important Color Field painter〔(Post-Painterly Abstraction artist bios retrieved online July 21, 2008 )〕 and an instrumental figure in the movement coined by Clement Greenberg called Post-Painterly Abstraction.〔(Greenberg essay, retrieved online July 21, 2008 )〕
==Biography==
Originally from South Dakota, Ray Parker entered the University of Iowa in Iowa City in 1940; he earned his MFA in 1948. From 1948 to 1951 he taught painting at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. During the 1940s his paintings were heavily influenced by cubism. In the early 1950s, however, Parker became associated with the leading abstract expressionists of the day, including Mark Rothko and Willem de Kooning. Parker soon began to simplify and refine his works realizing that through abstraction, and color his paintings could convey and express emotion.
Like Piet Mondrian, Stuart Davis and Jackson Pollock, Parker was a fan of jazz music; and his interest in Jazz, combined with his interest in abstract expressionism, led to his improvised painting style. Parker was also a great admirer of the painter Henri Matisse and he looked to this artist’s work for inspiration in terms of color and form, especially in his paintings of the 1970s and 1980s. By the late 1950s, he taught at Hunter College in New York City and he developed a singular style of painting that focused on intense color and simple geometric shapes. He was represented by the Samuel M. Kootz Gallery, one of the leading contemporary galleries in New York City during the late 1950s through the mid-1960s. At that time the Kootz Gallery represented important living artists such as Pablo Picasso, Pierre Soulages, Hans Hofmann, Zao Wou Ki as well as Ray Parker.
He is best known by his work of the late 1950s early 1960s called his ''Simple Paintings.'' These paintings are characterized by discreet cloudlike forms of clear, and intense color set against a white or an off-white background. Parker’s paintings utilizing this method of stacked, clearly colored lozenges and floating forms are straightforward and basically geometric in shape. Ray Parker's works relate to and predict the minimalist and Color Field paintings of the 1960s, made popular by American artists such as Morris Louis, Friedel Dzubas, Jules Olitski, Kenneth Noland, Helen Frankenthaler, and Ellsworth Kelly.

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