Nano Reid


Nano Reid was an Irish painter who specialised in landscape, figure painting and portraits.

Early life and education

Nano Reid was born Anne Margaret Reid on 1 March 1900, in Drogheda, County Louth. She was the eldest of four children of Thomas Reid, publican, and Anne Reid. The family home was above their pub in Drogheda, with the family also owning a number of properties in the town and in Dublin. Reid attended school at the Siena Convent, where her talent for painting developed. Upon leaving school she initially enrolled to train as a nurse at the Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, but left after two months. Her parents were persuaded by their parish priest, Dr Segrave, to allow Reid to attend the Metropolitan School of Art in Dublin. Whilst there she became an acquaintance of Harry Clarke. Reid taught in at her old school and a boys' school in Drogheda in 1923. She exhibited for the first time at the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1925 with three illustrations of poems. Reid exhibited with the RHA periodically until 1968, though never became an academic member.
In 1927, as was common with other Irish painters of the time, Reid went to Paris. Whilst there, she attended to the Académie de la Grande Chaumière for a few months, but the experience doesn't appear to have had an influence on her painting style. She then went to London to attend the Chelsea Polytechnic from 1929 to 1930, which she did not enjoy and after that remained in Ireland.

Artistic career

After returning to Ireland, Reid began to exhibit landscape painting at the RHA. Like other painters of the period, such as Paul Henry, she travelled to the west of Ireland for painting inspiration with her early work showing the landscapes, local people and fisherman of the area. In 1934, she held a solo show at the Society of Dublin Painters at St Stephen's Green. Her second solo show was in 1936 at the Daniel Egan Gallery in Dublin, the show consisted of 53 watercolours and 23 oil paintings. At the request of the Drogheda mayor, the collection was rehung in the town.
Reid's sister had taken over the family pub, to which Reid was a regular visitor while living primarily in Dublin. In Dublin she shared a house with her friend Patricia Hutchins. There was gossip about the nature of the women's relationship, but Hutchins went on to marry. After WWII, Reid moved to Fitzwilliam Square, taking in young men as lodgers, including Pearse Hutchinson.
In 1950, Reid and Norah McGuinness were selected to represent Ireland at the Venice Biennale of Art. This was the first time Irish artists participated in this international exhibition, which has been supported by the since then through a range of departments and agencies responsible for foreign affairs, arts and culture.

Work in collections