Ruley, Ellis 1882–1959

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Ellis Ruley 18821959

Painter

From Son of Slaves to Man of Means

With Ordinary Materials Created Extraordinary Art

Son-in-Laws Death Amid Racist Threats

Suffered a Mysterious Death

Sources

Using common house paint, self-taught artist Ellis Ruley created colorful works that transcended his artistic inexperience. Art collector and author of Discovering Ellis Ruley Glenn Robert Smith wrote, [Ruleys paintings] possess an undeniable power, a strange spell that lingers in the viewers mind as persistently as certain dreams. In the latter decades of his life, Ruley worked furiously, creating hundreds of paintings. Sadly, though, following his mysterious death in 1959, Ruley and his art slunk into oblivion. His house burned to the ground soon after his death and with it went most of his work. Less than a month later, his only daughter was committed to an insane asylum.

If Ruleys life sounds like the plot for a movie, it is. In 2002, Smith was working on a documentary also entitled Discovering Ellis Ruley. Not only will the film show Ruleys enigmatic life, but it will recount Smiths investigation into that life after discovering one of Ruleys paintings at a flea market. The result of Smiths research was the aforementioned book and a traveling exhibition of the same name. More importantly, this exposure has brought Ruley and his art to the worlds attention. After decades of obscurity, Ruley has finally taken his rightful place among Americas most important folk artists.

From Son of Slaves to Man of Means

Ellis Walter Ruley was born on December 3, 1882, in Norwich, Connecticut. After fleeing slavery, his father Joshua Ruley had settled in Norwich and married Eudora Robinson. She also came from a slavery background and was mother to several children before she met Joshua. Their first child together was Ruleyfollowed by four more sons. The family was very poor and Ruley attended Norwich Public Schools for only a short time before joining his father as a construction worker. In the early 1920s he married a woman named Ida Bee and had a daughter. Their daughter, Marion, was their only child. The couple separated by 1925.

Then, on September 19, 1929, Ruleys life changed completely after he was injured in a work-related traffic accident. Three years later he received $25,000 in compensationa small fortune in those days. However, as Smith noted, His injury wasnt so bad as to prevent him from enjoying his newfound prosperity. Ruley purchased several wooded acres in the all-white Laurel Hills section of Norwich and a brand new green Chevrolet coupe that he nicknamed Green Hornet.

Ruley also soon acquired a new wife. In 1933, Ruley married Wilhelmina Tootsie Fox, a German woman who had once been married to Ruleys younger brother Amos. The Ruleys became Norwichs first interracial couple. Along with his daughter Marion, they moved into a small, decrepit two-story house he found on his land. According to Ruleys great-granddaughter Dydee, interviewed by Smith, Ruley filled his house with a lot of old things that he treasured, including a phonograph, brass beds, and an antique clock. He was always meticulously groomed and even while working construction insisted on clean, pressed work clothes. He was also obsessed with self-sufficiency. He made his

At a Glance

Born Ellis Walter Ruley on December 3, 1882 in Norwich, CT; died on January 16, 1959, Norwich, CT; son of Joshua Ruley and Eudora Robinson; married Ida Bee (divorced 1925); married Wilhelmina Tootsie Fox, 1933 (separated late 1950s); one daughter, Marion. Religion: Baptist.

Career: Worked as a construction worker and contract laborer his entire life. Painted as a hobby during lifetime. One exhibition, Norwich Free Art Academy, December, 1952. Posthumous exhibitions include: Connecticut Black Artists, Slater Museum, Norwich, CT, 1980; and Discovering Ellis Ruley, traveling retrospective appeared at High Museum, Atlanta, GA, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, the New Orleans Museum of Art, Museum of American Folk Art, New York, NY, Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, CT, San Diego Museum of Art, Portland Art Museum, Portland, OR, and the Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI.

own pipes and combs and planted an extensive vegetable garden. According to www.dinifilms.com, he and Fox also became vegetariansa rarity in those days.

With Ordinary Materials Created Extraordinary Art

In 1939 Ruley began to paint. His first projects were practical; using ordinary house paint he created window screens for the numerous windows in his house. Eventually he built his own easel and began creating pictures on poster board and Masonite. Smith described Ruleys work as having a primitive quality possessing great charm, always colorful, decorative and festive in mood, a celebration of life. Though he painted extensively, his art received very little recognition during his life. One exception was art dealer Joseph Gualtieri who told Smith, [Ruley] came to the Norwich Free Art Academy, where I taught drawing and painting classes, to show me his work. I encouraged him to take part in our art fair. Ruley took Gualtieris advice and in December of 1952 he showed a series of paintings at the art school. A notice of the show reprinted in Smiths book noted, His paintings have all of the characteristics of the modern primitivefreshness of vision, directness of approach, sincerity, and a love for his work.

Gualtieri took samples of Ruleys work to New York to try and interest a gallery. However, no one at that time would look at the art of a black primitive painter, Gualtieri told Smith. Undeterred, Ruley continued painting and sold his work for fifteen dollars at local art fairs. He worked many days and many nights on those paintings, Ruleys great-granddaughter recalled in her interview with Smith. He told me that one day his paintings would be famous. I believed him.

According to Smith, Ruley was a narrative painter: he took up a brush to tell stories. Those stories included his painting Adam and Eve. The largest of his surviving works, the painting was described by Smith as something wonderful, and a little sad, and more than a little mesmerizing. Under a lush apple tree sit a ghostly white Adam and Eve, watched over by cows and goats, as the serpent approaches. Smith continued, Their undoing was at hand, but for that eternal moment, innocence lingered, suspended in slightly flaky paint on a board. If his description seems florid, it is because it was this painting that set Smith on the trail of Ruley. After purchasing the painting at a Massachusetts flea market for $3,500, he was approached by several collectors offering as much as $25,000 for the work. Intrigued, Smith began researching the painting. In the process he unearthed a decades-old mystery.

Son-in-Laws Death Amid Racist Threats

In 1948 Ruleys son-in-law Douglas Harris, was found dead on the Ruley property. He had three skull fractures and was stuck head first in a well which was just 20-inches across and five feet deep. Despite the fact that Harris was over six feet tall, weighed more than 200 pounds, and knew exactly where the well was, the coroner announced that he had tripped head first into the well and ruled his death an accident. Because the Ruleys had long been the objects of racist hatred, no black citizen of Norwich believed Harriss death accidental. Ruleys great-granddaughter told Smith of nightly harassment by white teenagers and land disputes with white neighbors. Our neighbors did not want to see a black man with a white woman, she told Smith. In addition, the Great Depression had taken hold of the country and times were very hard. However, because of the money from his accident, Ruley was living well. All of this caused a lot of problems, a nephew of Ruleys told Smith. Tooling around town in his new Chevrolet with his white wife, it is assumed that Ruley caught the attention of the local Ku Klux Klan which had its headquarters not far from Norwich and reputedly had over 1,000 members.

Despite Harriss horrible death, Ruley continued painting brightly colored, festive scenes. In fact, he seemed to retreat deeper into his art. He spent every free moment painting and in 1949 retired to paint full time. The paintings were piled under beds and in closets. When he could, he sold them, but mostly they were pushed away in the darkened corners of his house.

[His] subject matter varied from wild animalswith a preference for lionsto bathing beauties, pastoral landscapes, cowboys, and Indians, Gualtieri told Smith. He also drew inspiration from National Geographics and advertising campaigns. He had an intuitive sense of design and a wonderful feeling for color, wrote Smith.

As collectors, both Smith and Gualtieri hail Ruleys work; however, other critics have panned his crude style of painting. A review of the Discovering Ellis Ruley exhibitions stop in Atlanta recorded on www.cln.com, is typical of the criticism: There is no perspective involved. Figures are out of proportion. Technique is nonexistent. Nonetheless, across the board critics have admired Ruleys subject matter, particularly the juxtaposition between the bucolic nature of the scenes and the hint of something darker lingering just beneath the surface. A Los Angeles Times reviewer noted, In subject, [Ruleys work] can be compelling. What unites the various scenes Ruley depictsfarm life, a boating accident, hunting, cowboys, nearly abstract waterfallsis their pastoral environment. A kind of mid-20th century Peaceable Kingdom is shot through with an underlying sense of anxiety or even threat. Whether this represents, as some have suggested, Ruleys feelings about being an African American in a world that rejected him, is unknown. He never overtly commented on racism in his paintings. In fact, his granddaughter Gladys told Smith, I dont think my grandfather was prejudiced at all. In the face of racist taunts and threats, Ruleys preference was to turn the other cheek.

Suffered a Mysterious Death

Unfortunately, on January 16, 1959, Ruley could no longer turn the other cheek. He was found dead, his body partially frozen, on the long winding driveway to his house. He had a large gash on his head and there was a trail of blood over 100 feet long. After a cursory police examination, his deathlike Harrisswas ruled accidental. The coroner suggested he had tripped, bashing his head on the stone wall alongside the drive. A neighbor told Smith that Ruleys wallet was lying empty in the driveway when his body was found. Even though others confirmed that Ruley was rumored to have had a large sum of cash on him at the time of his death, the police did not investigate the possibility of robbery and the local newspaper did not mention the wallet at all. A few weeks after his death, his home went up in flames. Shortly after that a traumatized Marion was forcibly committed to Norwich State Hospital. There she was given a lobotomy without her familys consent.

I know my great-grandfather was murdered, Ruleys great-granddaughter told Smith. I also know that the story was covered up. Smith soon began to believe her. When he went to Norwich to research the artists life, he was followed, subjected to veiled threats, and had his hotel room ransacked. In his book he quotes one local who summed up the towns feelings towards his investigation, Were trying to forget what went on up there on that ol hill and here you are, wantin to start all that ol fuss again. Smiths research led to further mystery. He found that records of both Ruleys and Harriss death had been tampered with or were missing. He also heard from several people that shortly after Ruleys death, a city judge was seen driving Ruleys beloved green Chevrolet.

In 1993 Smith published Discovering Ellis Ruley and in 1996 an eight-city retrospective of Ruleys works was launched. Luminaries such as Rosa Parks and Hilary Clinton, attended the openings. Ruleys story brought a landslide of publicity from television, radio, magazines, and newspapers. The FBI vowed to investigate Ruleys and Harriss deaths and in 1995 a court order was issued releasing Marion Harris. Despite all of this, the Ruley family has still not received justice. They own none of Ruleys paintings and have no financial stake in his legacy, though according to www.sandiego-online.com, Smith has donated ten percent of his profits to them. By the end of 2002, two of Ruleys great-granddaughters, Sheila and Delores Traynum, were planning to self-publish a book called, A Promise to My Mother. [Smith] was begging my mother [Ruleys granddaughter Gladys] for secrets, Sheila told www.theday.com, alluding that she had kept a lot to herself. The sisters promised their mother that they would tell her story. Maybe the publication of their book will shed further light on Ruleys mysterious death. Or it may reveal what motivated Ruley to begin painting. In the end, their book is sure to accomplish one thingbringing much-deserved further recognition to a truly original, truly American artist.

Sources

Books

Discovering Ellis Ruley, New York: Crown, 1993.

Periodicals

American Artist, July 1995, p. 54.

Los Angeles Times, September 10, 1996, p. 6.

On-line

Creative Loa fi ng, www.cln.com/archives/atlanta/newsstand/atl071595/A-ELLIS.HTM

Dini Films International, www.dinifilms.com/ruley.html

San Diego Magazine Online, www.sandiegoonline.com/entertainment/sdwm/nov97/interview.stm

TheDay.com, www.theday.com/news/

Candace LaBalle