Tom Scott (1928âÂÂ2013) was an American Abstract painter, teacher and arts administrator. His career, spanning six decades, included architecture, sculpture, furniture design, photography and video and demonstrated an underlying conviction that painting needed to embrace change to remain vital. He was represented by Hilda Carmel Gallery(1961âÂÂ1963), Henri Gallery (1963âÂÂ1965), Studio Gallery (1986âÂÂ1987) and Touchstone Gallery (1987âÂÂ1999) His work is held in the collections of the University of Alabama, the Hunter Museum and UMBC as well as private collections throughout the USA and Europe. He retired from Maryland Institute College of Art as Dean of the Graduate Division in 1976.
He was born in Chicago Illinois, to Marguerite and Walter Scott and attended Hinsdale Township High School (1942âÂÂ1946). He joined the US Army Medical Corps, working as an art therapist with returning veterans (1946âÂÂ1948) and attended the Art Institute of Chicago under the G.I. Bill receiving a BFA in Painting (1948âÂÂ1952). He worked in Tennessee as an architectural and industrial designer for modernist Architect Hubert Bebb (1952âÂÂ1955), taught at Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts (1954âÂÂ1955), was a visiting lecturer in art at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville (1955) and was a regular visitor to Black Mountain College.
Starting out as an Abstract Expressionist he began painting on photographs in the 1950s in response to the emerging world of digital image processing. Using a well defined photograph as a base, he added fine, hard-edged paint lines and slashes of bold colour before re-producing the painted photograph to a monumental scale and distorting it to interpret the original picture in a series of generations.
He was a supporter of the women's movement and designed a poster for the National Organisation for Women's Chicago Chapter in 1967. In 1965 he married fellow activist and feminist Ann London and they were together until her death in 1975.
As Assistant Professor of Art at the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa (1955âÂÂ1961) he taught William Christenberry and met Godmother of the Kansas City Art Gallery Scene, Myra Morgan. In 1961 he moved with his then friend, William Christenberry to New York City. He worked as Art Department Head at The Adelphi Academy Brooklyn, completed a Masters Degree in Education at New York University (1961âÂÂ1963) and had his first New York solo exhibition at Hilda Carmel Gallery on Tenth Street, reviewed by Ti-Grace Atkinson in Art News
Following Linden Johnson's Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 he was appointed to the Center for Urban Education (1966âÂÂ1969) where he organised experimental art teaching during the New York Teachers Strike of 1968. He brought into schools clowns, puppeteers, drummers and other musicians, poets and visual artists to replace teachers who were on strike.
He supervised student teaching at the Pratt Institute Brooklyn where he worked with Dore Ashton and was Associate Professor at the College of Arts, Rochester Institute of Technology (1970âÂÂ1972). Whilst upstate he would take his students to Woodstock to see the work of outsider artist and friend Clarence Schmidt.
He settled in Baltimore in 1972 when he was appointed Graduate Dean and Director of Divisions for the Maryland Institute College of Art (1972âÂÂ1976). He took part in annual faculty exhibitions and the school held a memorial following his death in 2013. Following retirement he worked as an art therapist at City Hospital and exhibited work with Artists Equity and Artscape in Baltimore and with Studio Gallery and Touchstone Gallery in Washington DC In 1982 he had a solo exhibition of large format painted photographs at The Women's National Bank
In the mid 1980s Scott folded the painted photographs he had been making for years, taking them off the wall and transforming them into free-standing folding screens.àThis was followed by a series of âÂÂvirtual screensâ without centre panels, painting on the frames alone, and window picturesâ with shutter-like frames that swung from the walls
In 1987 four of his painted photographs and screens, including Clarence Schmidt's Garden (1985), Fells Point Stove (1972) and Sun Photo/Blue Rain (1985), were selected by Andy Grundberg, Photography Critic at The New York Times, and Sharon Keim, Executive Director, Washington Center for Photography, for the exhibition and lecture by Andy Grundberg, 'The Image and Beyond' held at Duke Ellington School for the Arts, Washington DC.