Seacoast Artist Association Celebrates Black History Month

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Courtesy photo

Edward Loper Sr,

The Seacoast Artist Association Second Sunday Series celebrates Black History Month with “The Prophet of Color,” a presentation by Amesbury (MA) artist Bob Richardson of Amesbury (MA) about his late teacher and mentor Edward Loper, Sr. on February 11th, 1-2:30 and how he influenced Mr. Richardson’s own evolving style in painting in teaching.  

Edward Loper, Sr. was an artist known for a palette of vibrant colors that would reflect the world around him.  He was born in Wilmington, Delaware, in 1916. He was basically a self-taught painter, although he also studied at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia for ten years. He is represented in major permanent collections in the Philadelphia Art Museum, the Delaware Art Museum, the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, DC, Howard University, the Museum of African American Art in Tampa, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and Clark-Atlanta University Collection of African American Art, among others.

Loper was associated with the WPA Art Project from 1936-1941. In 1947 he started teaching full-time.  He had private classes in his studio in Wilmington where Bob Richardson began his 30 years of study with him.   “We painted in the Cezanne style, using the Cezanne pallet of colors, under the direction of an award-winning artist with three honorary Dr. of the Art’s degrees to his credit!” recalls Mr. Richardson. “Today, as a former Loper student and a Cezanne-style oil painter, I use the Cezanne pallet of eight colors, making sure that my work brings forth the importance of composition and other critical relationships between light and dark and the added value of different hues within a color. Considering the shape of different colors and how the balance of all these elements fit upon the canvas allows me to create not merely a ‘nice’ painting but rather a very good, balanced oil painting with my signature proudly visible in the lower right corner.”  Mr. Richardson will demonstrate some of his technique at the presentation.

Starting in the late 1940s, to escape some of the racism he experienced at home, Ed Loper began traveling to Quebec City in Canada, where he would paint boldly colored cityscapes. Mr. Richardson was among the small group of his students that he began taking there every summer starting in the 1960s. As a teacher, Loper was known for his charismatic, intense and demanding demeanor.  He also taught at the Delaware Art Museum, Lincoln University, the Jewish Community Center.  A retrospective of his work was held at the Delaware Art Museum in 1996, representing some 60 years of his work.  Mr. Loper received many awards, among them an Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from Delaware State University, and the Governor’s Award for the Arts.   Two of Loper’s paintings hung in (then Vice President) Joe Biden’s official residence in Washington, DC.

Following his death in 2011, Delaware Today wrote of Loper, “Few local painters have achieved his level of recognition and influence, here and beyond, or have been as beloved by so many students.  Sen Thomas Carper (DE) stated that Loper’s “talent for color broke the mold of his time, and his passion for teaching others to see through color was unsurpassed,” adding that he “changed the landscape for black artists and paved the way for others who came after him.”Bob Richardson’s presentation and demo will take place on Sunday, February 11th, 1-2:30 at the Seacoast Artist Association gallery at 130 Water St. in downtown Exeter, NH.  Parking is free.  Email Mr. Richardson bbr4@comacast.net  at with questions and follow the SAA on Facebook and Instagram.

Photos attachedBob Richarson teaching on Monhegan IslandEdward Loper, Sr.

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