Not In Our Town joins the Logan family and friends in remembering Reva Logan, who passed away on July 22, 2013. Reva Logan and her husband David were the founding members of their namesake foundation, The Reva and David Logan Foundation, which helped enhance and transform the practice of the arts across the nation and provided pivotal support to the journalism field. Not In Our Town is proud to be one of the organizations supported through the Logan family’s commitment to giving.
Reva Logan, devoted supporter of the arts, 1922-2013
Reva Logan, who along with her husband David was a founding donor of the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts at the University of Chicago, died July 22 at home after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease. She was 91.
The couple supported the arts in numerous ways for decades, and the family considered the Logan Center one of their greatest projects. They met on the steps of the University of Chicago Law School, where they were both studying at the time. Over the course of more than 60 years of marriage, they built a partnership that sustained their family as well as a wide community of artists, writers and scholars.
Reva Logan “was the rock of our household,” said her son Jonathan. “She had to be, with four men to organize, feed and get out the door each day it was no picnic, yet she did it with a smile and an occasional kick in the pants. She was always there for us.”
The values that Reva Logan instilled in her children carried over to her passion for the arts, said her son Dan Logan.
“My Mom and Dad have always believed that the arts tell us who we are,” Dan Logan said at the Logan Center’s groundbreaking in May 2010. “They inspire us, and they make us better people.”
That faith in the inspiring power of the arts has been a driving force in the success of the Logan Center, which opened in 2012 to widespread praise. Chicago Tribune arts critic Howard Reich wrote in January 2013, “By any measure, the arrival of the Logan (Center) stands as a major event — not just for the university and for Hyde Park but for all Chicago and beyond.”
“With her passion for the arts, youth and community, Reva Logan provided inspiration for all involved with the Logan Center for the Arts. We will continue to celebrate her legacy by inspiring the next generation of artists both at the University, across the south side, and throughout Chicago,” said Bill Michel, Executive Director of the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts.
Her family described Reva Logan as an important presence behind the scenes for the family and their community. She grew up in Hyde Park, and attended Hyde Park High School and the University of Chicago. She taught for years at the Winnetka Community Nursery School.
Together, the Logans helped enhance and transform the practice of the arts across the nation. In the 1960’s Mrs. Logan, along with husband, David, began collecting photographic books and prints. The collection that eventually became one of the preeminent collections in the U.S. Their collection of Artist Illustrated Books resides at the Legion of Honor in the Logan Book Gallery in San Francisco. They are the initial sponsors of The Jazz Loft Project of the Center for Documentary Studies, featuring photographs and music taped by W. Eugene Smith, which has been exhibited at Lincoln Center and the Chicago Cultural Center. They also have been major supporters of Ken Burns’ series “Jazz” on PBS, the Chicago Arts Partnership for the Arts, and the multicultural literary organization The Guild Complex
Journalism was another field where the Logans offered pivotal support. They helped establish the nonprofit Center for Investigative Reporting as a leader in its field. Their foundation has also provided significant support for the PBS program “Frontline” and sponsors the annual Logan Symposium, the leading international conference for investigative reporters and students at the University of California Berkeley.
For all her accomplishments alongside her husband, Reva's greatest joy was her family - especially her grandchildren. She was never happier or more fulfilled than when in their company; helping them to learn new skills and the lessons of life, and just plain having fun.
David Logan preceded his wife in death in 2011. Reva Logan is survived by three sons — Dan, of Alexandria, Va.; Richard, of Oxford, England; and Jonathan, of Berkeley, Calif. — as well as her grandchildren Daniel, Erin, Crystal, Reuben, Angelica, Elizabeth, Andrew, Lily and Edward, and great-grandchildren Tiego and Malachi.
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