Juris K. Ubans

juris ubans

July 12, 1938 ~ December 30, 2021


Resided in: Portland, ME

Portland- Juris K. Ubans passed away on December 30, 2021 at Gosnell Memorial Hospice House. He was born in Riga, Latvia, the third son of Konrads Ubans, a prominent painter, and Elina Gailitis Ubans. His early childhood was spent during a time of terror, when the Soviet Union brutally occupied Latvia, then the Nazi regime, followed by the return of the Soviets. At this time, the family got separated and his mother and the three children fled to the West. After a very difficult year of wandering as refugees, they were settled in a camp in Germany run by the International Refugee Organization. In 1950, they were able to emigrate to the U.S. and settled in Syracuse, N.Y. After finishing his basic schooling there, he served for two years in the U.S. Army, then moved to California where he was able to earn a good salary as a draftsman and designer for architectural firms. Returning to New York, he graduated from Syracuse University with a BFA degree. In 1966 he moved with his wife Mara to Penn State, where he earned his MFA degree in 1968. Juris started teaching in the Art Department of Gorham State Teachers College, which eventually became USM, and taught there until his retirement in 2009. He taught painting and film and was instrumental in developing the curriculum toward the needs of the new and evolving institution. Concurrently, he was the Director of the Art Gallery until 1995. He developed it from an undertaking which had a budget of $50 during the first year to an influential and well-respected university gallery with a considerable collection of original works, especially photographs. He contributed greatly to the Cultural Affairs Committee, initiating film series and bringing renowned performers to the campus. He was a popular and influential teacher. Several of his former students became lifelong friends and his greatest support throughout his illness. In the 1970s, he and like-minded friends established The Film Study Center, which for the first time brought foreign art films to Portland. He soon expanded his efforts statewide, serving for five years on the Maine Commission on the Art and Humanities. He organized state-wide, traveling film series augmented by community discussions led by scholars in the Humanities. He was a committee member or Board of Trustees member of numerous Maine museums and galleries. This was followed by involvement on a national level when he became a commissioner of the National Association of Schools of Art and Design. He traveled throughout the country, accrediting schools and departments of art. In 1992 he was appointed by Senator George Mitchell to the American Folk Life Center of the Library of Congress and from 1994-96 he was Chairman of the Board of Trustees of that organization. He greatly enjoyed this experience in Washington D.C. When Latvia was finally able to free itself from its subjugation by the Soviet Union in 1991, he immediately established ties with the Latvian National Museum and the Latvian Academy of Art. Having visited Latvia to meet with his father in 1973, he had seen the backwardness and limitations artists and scholars had been forced to live under and he eagerly joined international efforts to move academic standards to the level seen in Europe and the U.S. He became a member of the Board of Examiners of the Art Academy, he was an advisor on their curriculum, he taught there for two semesters as a Senior Fulbright Scholar and was named an Honorary Professor at the Academy. Returning to USM, he established an exchange program between the Academy and USM, giving a number of students an opportunity to experience a different culture and approach to art. Even though art was at the center of his life, he was a many-faceted person. He was a highly rated chess player. Once he even beat Bengt Larsen, the Danish Grand Master during a simultaneous exhibition in Santa Monica. He was a good tennis player, advancing to the national Senior Games as a member of a doubles team. For many years he practiced Tai Chi in Portland. He was an avid collector of art in all genres and he has generously gifted numerous museums from his collection, including the Portland Museum of Art and Farnsworth. His two brothers predeceased him. He is survived by his wife of 56 years, Mara. Arrangements are under the direction of the Conroy-Tully Walker Funeral Home, 172 State Street, Portland, ME. To view Juris memorial page, or to share an online condolence, please visit www.ConroyTullyWalker.com In lieu of flowers, a donation can be made to the USM Foundation to augment the Juris Ubans Scholarship for painting, printmaking and photography.

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  1. Juris was a mentor to me in my choice to pursue a life in painting . He helped me get a scholarship to the Skowhegan school and to get into graduate school at Syracuse University. I worked for him at the USM Gallery where we shared many talks about art and much laughter. He selected my work for shows and collected my work for his own and the University collections. His encouragement and his sincere appreciation for art inspired so many students like me. Thank you Juris! Yours was a great spirit. –Marc Pelletier

    – Marc Pelletier

  2. Elegy To A Beloved Drawing Professor/Juris Ubans is gone/substantially solid man/ firmly fixed to earth/larger than life/so present with his presence/left me with memory movies/ impactful imprints/of ordinary encounters/ lasting moments or minutes /linger still/ carried across decades/from one century to another Karen Hand Ogg

    – Karen Hand Ogg

  3. During our many years of teaching together, Juris and I agreed that he was my right hand and that I was his left. The faculty and students with whom we worked may understand the truth in this.

    – Michael Moore

  4. I’m sorry to learn of Juris’s passing, particularly because I had fallen out of touch with him over the years. I was a painting student of his at USM and worked for him at the gallery from 1984-87. He was a gregarious man, always quick with a story or a laugh. He introduced me to Tai Chi in the painting studio upstairs in the Academy Building at USM. While a student, I lived on Carleton Street, just a few blocks from his house and while driving to Gorham in my little orange ’72 VW Superbeetle, he’d roar past me in his Volvo wagon, waving and smiling that smile of his that seemed as jolly as laughter. He was very kind and supportive, and an important and influential figure in my youth. Juris was a good man. My heart goes out to Mara.

    – Jody Dube

  5. Juris was my teacher at UMPG (now USM). He illuminated the idea for me that painting was a spiritual practice. Over the years I saw Juris around Portland and at various art related events. He made me feel seen and appreciated as an artist and a person. I ran into him at the South Portland Rec Center just before Covid. It was as if no time had gone by and we picked up where we left off. I am so saddened by this loss. He was an important mentor to me.

    – gail spaien

  6. I met Juris a few years ago when I found and signed up for his film-course offering in the USM OLLI course catalogue. I was hooked! We both saw films as a source of immediate entertainment and as a worthy art form that delivered long-term and rich insights into the human condition. His courses were invariably heavily attended because, like any natural teacher, he shared his obvious enthusiasms and encouraged open discussions from his “students.” His warm sense of humor targeted his own struggles with modern technology, but he more than compensated with his deep and extensive knowledge of film history and the many cinematic art eras and forms. I am sure that many of his classroom groupies will miss him– as a dedicated teacher, as an advocate of film and fine arts, and as a friend who shared with us what he truly loved.

    – Jim Bucar

  7. Juris was always a very warm and gentle person with a welcoming smile and kind words. When I first started working at USM in 1989, he was very supportive as I was setting the ESOL program. One our first students was his nephew from Latvia. Juris was always upbeat and so interesting to talk to. We lost a very intelligent, kind and cultured human being.

    – Bart Weyand

  8. During the 80s when I was a young curator at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Juris was a generous mentor and friend. I learned much from him: his open embrace of the artist life, his dedication to his students and community, his welcome of surprise, and his genuine affection for people. He was in all things a kind and lovable man.

    – John W. Coffey

  9. Words sometimes don’t seem enough when expressing the impact that Juris had on my life and so many other lives. Juris was a gift that I will always treasure. The memories and loving kindness he shared will always be present and a reminder of his footprint in life. Warm thoughts of love and hugs to Mara as she navigates her day to day life without Juris near.

    – Susan Avery

  10. I am so sorry to hear of Juris’s passing. I worked for him at USM from 1970 to 1975. What a terrific experience that was! His joy for the world of film and art was contagious! Juris had a huge impact on setting me successfully on the path to a life in the performing arts. I consider him a very special mentor. What a joyous and inspiring man he was! I am sure there are many more former students and colleagues who feel the way I do. –Bill Wood Harrison, Maine

    – Bill Wood

  11. Juris always brightened a room with his big smile and jovial manner, beneath which he was a deep and caring man. He was one of my first friends when I came to Portland in the mid-70s. I already miss him. Much love to Mara Joe Wishcamper

    – joe wishcamper

  12. Juris was an amazing teacher, mentor and friend. He guided me through a transformational student exchange to Latvia where I met lifelong friends and many fellow artists from all over the world. He was a true legend and will greatly missed. My thoughts and love go out to his family.

    – Silver Shea

  13. We are deeply sorry for your loss ~ Conroy-Tully Walker Funeral Home – Portland Chapel

    – A Memorial Tree was planted for Juris K. Ubans

  14. Juris was a great man, as good spirited and modest as he was talented and intelligent. He gave a lot of young artists a start in the world and put USM on the art map.

    – Edgar Beem

  15. Juris was a grand teacher and a friend during my education and employment at USM. He taught me to “throw paint” on a large canvas liberating my thought process of perfection. I drove the USM Van filled with art students on many of his famous all day and into the night Boston Art Adventures. Trips to the many museums outside of Boston and intown as well as ethnic restaurants and art stores filled the day; the last stop Portsmouth for a coffee and or ice cream. Riding the subway from Cambridge always an adventure. On one of the last trips he commented, “I think I am getting too old for these all day trips”. I could never imagine him too old to share this experience with his students. Thank you Juris for sharing your love of art and life which contributed to the success of many USM Art Students. And thank you Mara for supporting him in his profession.

    – Theresa C. Jordan ’93

  16. I was so sorry to learn of Juris’ passing. He was a good friend when I worked all those years at USM. We had long conversations about Maine art and artists, and about USM’s students and their aspirations. I am proud to have several of his pieces hanging in my home, and he will always be remembered here as a kind, thoughtful, personable man. I will miss him. May his memory be a blessing.

    – Lawrence Bliss

  17. I am deeply saddened to hear of Juris’s passing . He was was my painting teacher back in the 70s at Gorham and always was encouraging , opening me up to new ideas. His classes were serious but there was always an element of fun. He will be very much missed.
    My heartfelt belated condolences to Mara.
    Pat Owen,Kerry, Ireland


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