John Register

Summary

John Register (1939–1996) was an American realist artist noted for his paintings and drawings, which were notably often minimalist, spare depictions of hotels, cafés, and empty chairs.[2][3]

John Register
Born
John Sherman Register[1]

February 1, 1939[2]
New York City, US
Died9 April 1996(1996-04-09) (aged 57)
Malibu, California, US
Known forPainting
MovementRealism

Background edit

Register was born in 1939[2] in New York City to Dorothy Deming Pratt Register (1909-1998)

Register graduated from the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey. After graduating from the University of California, Berkeley, with B.A. in Literature in 1961, he met his wife Catherine Richards in a photography class at Pasadena Art Center where he studied commercial art. Register also studied painting for a semester at the Académie Julian in Paris,[2] and later studied at the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco.

In 1964 the two moved to New York, where Register studied design and television at the Pratt Institute (founded by his great-grandfather).[3] They were engaged in late 1963[4] and married on February 6, 1964, ultimately having three children. While living in New York, Register pursued a successful career as an advertising art director at Young & Rubicam and later McCaffrey and McCall — and lived in a Fifth Avenue apartment.[2]

In 1972, just after his 33rd birthday, and unhappy with his work,[3] Register excused himself from an important client meeting saying he had a dental appointment. He wrote a note to his boss and never returned. He subsequently became a full-time painter, spent a year in New York painting every day, and studied briefly at the Art Students League[5] — before moving with his family to California. His interests included racing cars and ice-boats, photography, tennis, running, competitive chess, letter writing, reading, backpacking, fishing, and surfing.[2]

Register was born with a genetic kidney disease [3] and suffered kidney failure 15 years before his death. He received a kidney transplant from his sister in 1981 and, when that failed, received another transplant in 1985. In September 1994, he was told he had four to six weeks to live. He lived instead for 18 months, battling cancer (caused by anti-rejection medication)[3] until his death in 1996 at the age of 57, in Malibu, California.[3][6]

At the time, Register was survived by his wife, Catherine R. Register,[7] (Catherine R. Murff); his mother, Dorothy Pratt Register Barrett (1909-1998) (then remarried) of Hillsborough, California; his sister, Barbara Pratt Register of Rolling Hills, California; his half-brother, Eliot Steven Barrett (1943-2013) of St. Helena, California; and his three children, Peter Eliot Register, David Croft Register and Kathryn (Kate) Sisson Register; and a grandson, John Sherman Register II.[3] He has six grandchildren who were born after his death: Emma Jayne Register, Samuel Henry Register, Finn Alexander Register, Noah John Hoffmann, Sophie Caitlin Register and Elisabeth Catherine Hoffmann.

Work edit

Register said "I look for offbeat beauty. I don't know what I'm looking for until I find it. There are things so ugly that I can't paint them. Sometimes I get depressed by that city, and by other cities I visit. But I like the patina of things that have been battered by life".

In his 1989 biography of Register, John Register Persistent Observer, Barnaby Conrad, wrote that Register's "vision of isolated streets, empty coffee shops, long shadows, old hotels, and bus stations represent a haunting stillness tinged with regret and hope."[7]

Register studied with the portrait painter Raymond Kinstler and landscape painter Lennart Anderson.[3] He had his first show in Los Angeles in 1975 and received the Francis J. Greenburger Foundation Award from the Guggenheim Museum.[3]

He has shown at the Modernism Gallery in San Francisco, David Stuart Gallery in Los Angeles, the Earl McGrath Gallery in Santa Monica, and the Laguna Art Museum.[7] With his work often compared to Edward Hopper's,[8][5] a show of drawings by Mr. Register and Edward Hopper took place in 1996. The San Jose Museum of Art hosted a major retrospective show of Mr. Register's work in the fall of 1997.[3] The exhibit John Register: Persistent Observer took place at the Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art at Pepperdine University, Malibu, CA, in 2000, subsequently traveling to his alma mater, the Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville, NJ, and later to the West Valley Art Museum, Sun City, Arizona.[2]

Register's work was used, and credited, as the inspiration for the video for "Turn My Head" by the band Live in 1997. His paintings were also featured in the movie In Her Shoes, (2005), the director, Curtis Hanson using the paintings to suggest "loneliness."[9]

References edit

  1. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths BARRETT, DOROTHY PRATT". New York Times. February 12, 1998.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "John Register". SWart. February 1, 2000.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Carl Nolte (April 11, 1996). "OBITUARY -- John Register". SFGate.
  4. ^ "MIss Richards, John S. Register Planning to Wed". New York Times. December 21, 1963.
  5. ^ a b "John Register: A Retrospective". Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art.
  6. ^ "OBITUARY -- John Sherman Register". San Francisco Examiner, p. 12. April 13, 1996.
  7. ^ a b c Myrna Oliver (April 13, 1996). "John Sherman Register; Painter of L.A. Cityscapes". LA Times.
  8. ^ "The Haunting Realism of John Register". LA Modern Auction. May 15, 2016.
  9. ^ Ridley Scott Encyclopedia. Scarecrow Press, 2009, p. 156. 28 September 2009. ISBN 9780810869523.

External links edit

  • Register at Modernism.
  • Desert Landscape at the San Jose Museum of Art.
  • The Conversation at the Seavest Collection.