Irene Rice Pereira (August 5, 1902�January 11, 1971) was an American abstract artist, known for her work in the Geometric abstraction, Abstract expressionist, and Lyrical Abstraction genres and her use of the principles of the Bauhaus school.
Pereira was born Irene Rice in 1902 in Chelsea, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, the eldest of three sisters and one brother. After her father died in 1918 she and her family moved to Brooklyn, New York. In 1922 she began working as a secretary to help support her family in the wake of her father's death and her mothers illness. In 1927, she enrolled in evening art classes at the Art Students League in New York City. Among her instructors at the Art Students League were Jan Matulka and Richard Lahey. In 1931, she travelled to Europe and North Africa to further her painting studies and she studied with Am�d�e Ozenfant in Paris. In the mid-1930s she studied with Hans Hofmann, and among her friends and colleagues were Burgoyne Diller (see blog post April 2012), Dorothy Dehner, David Smith, Hilla Rebay, Arshile Gorky, John D. Graham. and Frederick Kiesler. In 1935, Pereira became one of the founders and first instructors at the Design Laboratory, a school modelled on the Bauhaus school.
Irene Rice Pereira's first husband was the commercial artist Umberto Pereira. She later married George Wellington Brown, a naval architect. When this marriage ended in divorce, she married the Irish poet George Reavey in 1950; that marriage, too, ended in divorce. She used the professional name I. Rice Pereira to avoid discrimination against female artists. She died January 11, 1971, in Marbella, Spain.
The Boca Raton Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Honolulu Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Art (Washington D.C.), The Phillips Collection, and the University of Iowa Museum of Art are among the public collections holding work by I. Rice Pereira.
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1932 Untitled (Boats at Cape Cod) oil on canvas 40.8 x 50.5 cm |
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c1934-35 Masts oil on canvas 71.1 x 86.4 cm |
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c1934-35 Pier oil on canvas 61 x 76.2 cm |
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c1934 Table Top Still Life with Champagne Cooler, Horn and Ball oil on canvas 101.6 x 76.2 cm � Michael Rosenfield Gallery N.Y. |
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1936 Man and Machine oil on canvas 92.1 x 122.6 cm |
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1936 Sketch for Machine Composition #2 pencil & crayon on paper 44.5 x 57.5 cm |
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1937 Machine Composition #2 oil on canvas 122.5 x 152.4 cm |
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1938 Washington (aka Surreal City) oil on canvas 76.2 x 91.4 cm � Michael Rosenfield Gallery N.Y. |
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1946 Transitory Reflection oil on glass and panel 63.5 x 43.2 cm � Michael Rosenfield Gallery N.Y. |
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1946 Transversion ceramic fluid, porcelain cement on corrugated glass on panel of oil on hardboard 34.3 x 40 cm |
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1948 Composition graphite 33.8 x 36.8cm |
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1950 Bright Depths oil on canvas 76.2 x 86.4 cm |
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1950 Green Mass oil on canvas 101.9 x 127.1 cm |
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1951 Evaporating Night oil on canvas 92.07 x 76.83 cm |
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1951 Light is Gold glass, acrylic, lacquer, casein, gold leaf 76.5 x 59 cm |
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1952 Inside Outside oil on canvas 127 x 76.2 cm |
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1952 Transforming Night oil on canvas 101.6 x 76.2 cm |
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1952 White Marker on magenta coloured paper 45.5 x 63 cm approx. |
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1953 Mecca oil on canvas 101.9 x 126.9 cm |
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1953 Roselit Day oil on canvas 91.3 x 127 cm |
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n.d. Heart of Flame oil on canvas 142 x 127 cm |
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n.d. Three Dimensional Abstract Composition oil on board & glass 23.5 x 18.4 cm |
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