Jan Petry was a longtime art director at the Leo Burnett advertising agency who was an enthusiastic champion of outsider art and served for three decades on the board of Chicago-based Intuit: The Center for Intuitive and Outsider Art, including as board chair.
Petry also was an accomplished artist and sculptor herself, specializing in woodworking.
âJan Petry was instrumental in establishing Intuit as a premier museum of self-taught and outsider art, thanks to her 25 years of serving as its chair of exhibitions â overseeing groundbreaking shows with talented guest curators â before the museum could afford a full-time curator,â said Debra Kerr, the museumâs president and CEO. âWhen the museum did begin to grow, she generously shared her knowledge, contacts and wisdom with a grateful staff.â
Petry, 85, died of complications from liver cancer on Sept. 5 at her home at the Admiral at the Lake retirement community in the Uptown neighborhood, said her sister, Jo Ellen Bivens. She had lived in the Lincoln Park neighborhood for more than 30 years until 2012, when she moved to Uptown.
Born Janet Petry at her parentsâ home in New Paris, Ohio, Petry moved with her family as a youngster to Richmond, Indiana. After graduating from Richmond High School, she earned a bachelorâs degree in art education in 1961 from Ball State Teachers College, which now is Ball State University.
Petry taught high school for one year in Centerville, Ohio, before deciding in 1962 to move to Chicago to return to school for graduate studies in art at the Illinois Institute of Technologyâs Institute of Design. From there, she worked at several small design firms before taking a job as an art director at Leo Burnett.
For the next quarter century, Petry worked on TV and print ad campaigns for clients like Kellogg Co., and she rose to become a vice president and associate creative director.
Donna Speigel, a longtime friend and former Leo Burnett colleague, recalled a creative campaign that Petry oversaw for Kellogâs Corn Flakes.
âIt was unlike anything at the time â it involved special effects of live-action kids âridingâ on real corn flakes in waves of milk all set to a folksy and warm music track with gentle lyrics. It was pure magic, which was a major pivot from the animated talking critters and commercial jingles of the day,â Speigel said. âThat work, as I recall, catapulted Janâs career.â
Petry retired from Leo Burnett in 1995.
Petry and her life companion, Angie Mills, began collecting art in 1980, initially interested in antiques and then folk art. After attending a groundbreaking show in Louisville, Kentucky, about Black folk art in America, the couple were inspired to begin collecting outsider art, according to a 2002 Tribune article.
Petry expanded her passion for outsider art when she connected in 1991 with several art enthusiasts, including Susann Craig, who were founding Intuit. Petry went on to direct more than 135 art exhibits at Intuit, including curating shows and overseeing pop-up art exhibits in borrowed spaces, and she joined Intuitâs board in 1994.
âHer creativity, drive and confidence propelled her to leadership at Intuit,â said Cleo Wilson, a fellow board member and Intuitâs former executive director. âAlthough ⊠we didnât even have a gallery space, in 1993, Jan curated âEccentric Chairs,â a monthlong exhibition in a borrowed space that featured more than 25 unconventional chairs loaned from collections around the country. The exhibition received critical acclaim.â
Petry brought a keen eye for presentation to her volunteer work as a curator.
âIn planning exhibits, she knew exactly how every aspect should appear to a visitor, including placement of the art on the walls and vitrines and what typeface should be used,â Wilson said. âHer passionate vision provided the basis for Intuitâs education efforts and helped establish our brand.â
After spending 25 years as the chairwoman of the exhibitions committee of Intuit, Petry chaired Intuitâs board of directors from 2016 until 2019. Most recently, she had co-chaired a capital campaign.
Currently closed to the public, Intuit is undertaking an extensive expansion and renovation of its West Town space, which will reopen in spring 2025. In the newly reopened museum, the largest gallery will be named for Petry.
âAs she moved into the positions of board chair and capital campaign co-chair, she enthusiastically championed the changes now happening,â Kerr said. âIntuit is about to reopen as a renovated and expanded museum, nearly tripling its exhibition space, and Jan Petry was key to making that happen.â
Kerr also recalled Petryâs willingness to step up to help Intuit in myriad ways.
âShe was inquisitive, offered counsel and was generous in spirit,â Kerr said. âWhen the (museumâs) Young Professionals Board hadnât quite met its financial target to commission a new artwork for Intuitâs collection, Jan raised her hand, pledging the balance of funds to reach the goal. When one of the (teens attending Intuitâs summer program) needed financial support to head off to college, Jan quietly helped.â
Petryâs own artwork included wood sculptures and pastel-stick studies. She presented her work at a variety of shows before presenting her first solo exhibition, titled âJuicy,â at the Carl Hammer Gallery in Chicago in 2008. The exhibition contained 14 works of organic wooden sculpture.
The Racine Art Museum in Racine, Wisconsin, acquired three of Petryâs sculptures for its permanent collection.
âJanâs sculptures consistently captured that perfection of craft, attention to detail, grace and strength, and wit and humor and elegance that made her work breathe with a minimal yet warm elegance,â Speigel said.
Outside of artwork, Petry enjoyed volunteering at a womenâs shelter, playing tennis and spending time at a second home â which she called a âcasitaâ â in Santa Fe, N.M., her sister said.
âJan was a tastemaker â she had the gifts of creative vision, attention to detail, a precision to her craftsmanship and a discerning eye, whether she was art directing a television commercial, designing a cereal box for Kelloggâs, curating an art exhibition for Intuit, discovering and personally collecting the work of self-taught artists, or designing the home she shared with her companion of 54 years, Angie Mills,â Speigel said. âThe vintage condominium they lived in for many decades was an arts outing in itself. They curated a distinctive life story told through design and art.â
In addition to her life companion and her sister, Petry is survived by another sister, Nancy.
A private celebration of life service will be held in November.
Bob Goldsborough is a freelance reporter.