Don Reichert RCA is a Canadian artist. While primarily a painter in
the abstract expressionist tradition, he is also notable as a photographer and digital media artist. Born in Libau,
Manitoba in 1932 to parents who had immigrated from Austria, he studied art in Canada, Mexico, and England.
He taught for many years at the University of Manitoba. Praised early on by the critic Clement Greenberg,
Reichert has produced work that is held in many notable public, corporate and private collections,
including the National Gallery of Canada, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Montreal Museum of Fine Art, and the
Canada Council Art Bank, among others.
Reichert’s early work often combined the elegant brush-strokes of abstract expressionist painting
with the techniques of colour field composition. Other significant strands of his work center on black-and-white
paintings resembling Asian calligraphy, or on the use of Latin American imagery, particularly skull imagery
derived from various Latin American ruins. He is perhaps best known, though, for large canvasses painted out of
doors. While abstract, these are reflective of the landscapes around him, often the forests and lakes of the
Canadian Shield. The technique of composition is unusual: canvasses are laid on the uneven ground, and the
impression of the earth beneath is subtly incorporated into the composition.
Multimedia works include photographs that have been painted over, often with elegant splattering or dripping in
the style of Jackson Pollock. He has also created works that incorporate photographs into painting. As
Reichert is an accomplished pilot, many of these are aerial photographs: a continuation of his ongoing
interest in landscape.
He has worked closely with internationally-acclaimed ceramic artist Robert Archambeau. Both artists operate
studios in the remote Canadian town of Bissett, Manitoba.
Reichert has for some years been affiliated with the arts magazine Border Crossings.