Word: rederic
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...season at Manhattan's Whitney Museum of American Art will cover all three floors, more space than the museum ever gave for a one-man exhibition. The size of the show is all the more impressive because of the artist it will honor. He is Bernard Reder, 64, an enormously imaginative New York sculptor whose name is scarcely known to the general public...
...Bernard Reder has, in a sense, been perennially out of fashion. Unlike most of his contemporaries, he has always disliked modeling in clay, preferring to work with hammer and chisel. Even today, though he now models in wax, the material that gives him the most spontaneity, he still approaches each work as if it were to be hewn out of a mass. "I am a sculptor," says he, "who enters the volume: always I conserve the block." This concept of "volumetricity" is basic to his art. Each statue, says Reder, must be seen from all sides and not just frontally...
...were: Jack D. Andrews '39, Donald Barker '38, Herschel Berman '38, Arthur R. Borden '39, Charles B. Ellis '39, Williams R. Frye '40, Luke M. Gibson '39, Edgar Haff '39, Charles V. Haley '38, John H. Howland '39, James R. O'Leary '40, Timothy J. Reardon '38, Charles S. Reder '38, and Henry H. Urrows...
Formal dancing from 10 to 2:30 will follow the play with music by Frank McGinley's orchestra. The dance committee, headed by Charles Reder '38, also includes Robert W. Bean '39, Edward G. Dreyfus '40, Philip P. Finn '39, Paul M. Hickox '38, Edward F. Logan '39, and Nirman R. Willian...
House Committeemen in charge of the dance are Charles Reder '38 and Richard Benner '39. The dance committee consists of John B. Tew '38, chairman, DeWitt Hornor '38, Everett A. Black '38, William E. Horton '39, Phil C. Neal '40, Russell R. Ayres...