Exhibition,
lectures to honor Cober
Late
illustrator and teacher held faculty post at UB from 198796
By
PATRICIA DONOVAN
Contributing Editor
The university
will honor the life and work of the late illustrator and teacher Alan
E. Cober with a series of events that recognize his innovative and nationally
distinguished work, collegial relationships with other artists of national
distinction and the great influence he had on the many students he taught
as visiting professor of art and Distinguished Visiting Artist at UB
from 1987-96.
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COBER |
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The exhibition,
"Alan E. Cober: A Retrospective Afterlife," was organized by the Selby
Gallery at the Ringling School of Art and Design, in Sarasota, Fla.
It will
open with a reception from 5-8:30 p.m. Feb. 15 in the first floor gallery
of the UB Gallery in the Center for the Arts, North Campus, and will
continue through May 18.
The reception
will be accompanied by several activities in the CFA Screening Room.
These include introductions by Sandra Olsen, gallery director, and remarks
by President William R. Greiner and Kathleen Howell, an emeritus professor
in the Department of Art, who brought Cober to UB.
Following
these remarks, Adele Henderson, professor and chair of the Department
of Art, and Ellen Cober, the widow of the artist, will present the first
Alan E. Cober Scholarship to a UB student of illustration or graphic
design.
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"Memorial
to an Unexploded Land Mine," etching by Sue Coe from "Tragedy
of War" cycle, 2000. |
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After the
presentation, the first lecture in the Alan E. Cober Memorial Lecture
Series, entitled "Drawing from Life," will be presented by Cober's colleague,
artist Sue Coe, whose 30-year career in the U.S. has been marked by
disturbing and controversial work that illustrates her outraged stand
toward various social problems as she attempts to educate, influence
and inspire change and action in her audience.
Coe has
been featured on the cover of Art News, and her work is in the
permanent collections of many notable museums and has been the subject
of many exhibitions, including a retrospective at the Hirschhorn Museum
in Washington. Her work has been published as social commentary in The
New York Times, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone and countless other
periodicals.
The lecture
is scheduled for 6:30 p.m.
Other lectures
in the series, which are free of charge and open to the public, will
be delivered by illustrator Barbara Nessim at 6 p.m. April 11 in the
CFA Screening Room, and Judy Garlan, art director for the Atlantic
Monthly, at 6 p.m. April 25, also in the Screening Room.
An artist,
illustrator and educator for more than 25 years, Nessim is chair of
the Department of Illustration at Parsons School of Design. Her work
has been featured in many major publications, including Rolling Stone,
Time and Newsweek, and her paintings and drawings shown in
many galleries and museum exhibitions. Since 1980, she has focused on
computer art and has lectured widely on the subject.
Garlan
worked with Cober on many assignments in her 17 years as art director
of the Atlantic Monthly. During her tenure, the magazine won some 400
illustration and design awards, and published work by many of the finest
illustrators and photographers in the world.
For more
information about any of the events honoring Cober, contact Reine Hauser
at 645-6912, ext. 1424, or at rihauser@acsu.buffalo.edu.
Alan Cober
frequently is cited as one of the most innovative illustrators America
has produced. He was among a small cadre of post-World War II illustrators
who inserted concepts drawn from modern art into an art form that was
then dominated by sentimental realism.
Cober's
work went beyond illustration to include an often shocking visual journalismpithy
pen and ink drawings that critiqued social injustice, like the Times
illustrations of school children in Boston who still were segregated,
despite laws to the contrary, and a wizened old man held as prey in
a nursing home.
His work
appeared regularly for decades in top American publications, including
Time, Newsweek, Atlantic Monthly, Rolling Stone, Esquire, Life, Look,
The New York Times. It was commissioned as well by NBC, CBS and
a number of Fortune 500 companies.
He worked
on adventure and mystery computer games and illustrated more than 23
books, including "The Tiger's Bones and Other Plays for Children" by
the late Ted Hughes, poet laureate of England.
His own
book, "The Forgotten Society," shocked the public with its graphic depiction
of the lives and often miserable conditions of people incarcerated in
retirement homes, prisons and mental institutions like the New York
State psychiatric facility at Willowbrook. In a later publication, "The
Wake-up Call," he addressed other issues plaguing contemporary Americadrug
addiction, AIDS, toxic chemicals and hazardous wastes.
Cober also
was well-known as a dedicated and influential teacher of young artists,
many of whom continue to express gratitude for his guidance in both
aesthetic and professional realms that he imparted to them before his
death in 1998 at age 62.
Ellen Cober,
Nessim and Coe have donated some of the original drawings and sketchbooks
in the exhibition so they can continue to be used as an educational
resource at UB.
The exhibition
and the lectures have been sponsored with the generous assistance and
support from the Department of Art, the Department of Art History and
Brainstormthe Communicator's Club of Buffalo.