Showing posts with label Jasper Johns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jasper Johns. Show all posts

05/02/25

Prints and Paintings by Edvard Munch @ Harvard Art Museums: Gift from the Collection of Philip A. and Lynn G. Straus

The Harvard Art Museums announce an extraordinary gift from the collection of Philip A. and Lynn G. Straus: sixty-two prints and two paintings by the Norwegian Master Edvard Munch (1863–1944)
Edvard Munch Artworks
Left: Edvard Munch, Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones), 1906–8. Oil on canvas. Busch-Reisinger Museum, The Philip and Lynn Straus Collection, 2023.551. Right: Edvard Munch, Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones), 1899. Woodcut printed in orange, yellow, black, and dark greenish blue on tan wove paper. Fogg Museum, The Philip and Lynn Straus Collection, 2023.602. Photos © President and Fellows of Harvard College
The Harvard Art Museums announce an extraordinary gift from the collection of Philip A. and Lynn G. Straus; the gift comprises sixty-two prints and two paintings by Edvard Munch as well as one print by Jasper Johns. The bequest is a final act of generosity from the Strauses following a relationship with the museums that began in the 1980s and that includes multiple gifts of artworks over the years; the support of a 1990s-era expansion, renovation, and endowment of the museums’ conservation center; and the endowment of specific conservation and curatorial positions. The Spring 2025 exhibition Edvard Munch: Technically Speaking will feature many of the recently gifted works.

The works by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch (1863–1944) in the Strauses’ bequest join an important concentration of paintings and prints by the artist already at Harvard and build upon multiple past gifts and assisted purchases of Munch’s work by the couple—117 works altogether. The total number of works by the artist in the Harvard Art Museums collections is now 142 (8 paintings and 134 prints), constituting one of the largest and most significant collections of works by Munch in the United States.

Lynn G. and Philip A. Straus (Harvard Class of 1937) have been among the Harvard Art Museums’ most generous benefactors. Both were dedicated patrons of the arts and education, supporting libraries, museums, and institutions affiliated with early childhood education, civil rights, and human services. In 1969, the couple purchased their first print by Munch, Salome (1903), an acquisition that marked the start of their passion for the artist’s work. Following a commitment to a $7.5 million gift in 1994, the museums’ conservation center—the oldest fine arts conservation treatment, research, and training facility in the United States—was renamed the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies. The couple have also supported vital conservation positions of staff who specialize in works on paper, as well as curatorial internship and fellowship positions in the museums’ prints and drawings departments. Philip, a New York investment advisor and portfolio manager, passed away in 2004, and their bequest comes to Harvard following Lynn’s passing in 2023. In total, the couple gifted or enabled purchases of 128 works to the Harvard Art Museums over their lifetimes, including works by Max Beckmann, Georges Braque, Alexander Calder, Timothy David Mayhew, and Emil Nolde.
“We are immensely grateful to Philip and Lynn Straus for their generosity and stewardship over these many years,” said Sarah Ganz Blythe, the Elizabeth and John Moors Cabot Director of the Harvard Art Museums. “Their enthusiasm for the work of Edvard Munch ensures generations of students and visitors can experience and study his prints and paintings here in Cambridge. Through their distinct style of collecting Munch’s prints—seeking out and acquiring multiple images of the same theme—they created a collection that affords deep insights into the artist’s practice and is therefore a perfect match for a university museum with a strong teaching and research mission.” Sarah Ganz Blythe continued: “Their support of the conservators and conservation scientists in the Straus Center has had a transformative impact on the numerous fellows who have trained there, as well as provided a facility where every object in our collections can be cared for and scientifically researched.”
The Strauses’ recent bequest includes Munch’s iconic painting Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones) (1906–8) and Train Smoke (1910), both of which are now in the collection of the Busch-Reisinger Museum, one of the Harvard Art Museums’ three constituent museums. These paintings join Winter in Kragerø (1915) and Inger in a Red Dress (1896), previously given to the museum by Lynn in memory of Philip in 2012.

In Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones), a man and woman stand side by side yet still feel isolated from one another, facing toward the sea and away from the viewer, each embedded in a colorfully sedimented landscape. Edvard Munch first painted this subject around 1892 and returned to it repeatedly in his printmaking and painting thereafter. Train Smoke, which depicts nature disrupted but also dynamically animated by the Industrial Revolution, is a landscape unlike those by Munch already in the collection. Both paintings demonstrate Munch’s experimentation with color and surface texture, through his varied use of thick impasto, diluted paint drips, and even areas of bare canvas, a hallmark of Munch’s artistic legacy.
“It is hard to overestimate the significance of Munch’s painting Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones). Capturing the tension between proximity and distance—spatial as well as emotional—the work addresses the universal theme of the human condition,” said Lynette Roth, the Daimler Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum at the Harvard Art Museums. “The Strauses had generously loaned their painting for the inaugural installation of the renovated Harvard Art Museums building that opened in November 2014, and we are thrilled to be able to teach with and display it alongside the other significant paintings from their collection going forward.”
Over the course of 2024, both paintings have undergone cleaning and other treatments by Kate Smith, Senior Conservator of Paintings and Head of the Paintings Lab, and Ellen Davis, Associate Paintings Conservator, both in the museums’ Straus Center. Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones) had been varnished at some point in its history, which is not consistent with Munch’s practice of leaving his canvases without a unified glossy surface. Train Smoke needed paint stabilization and cleaning to remove atmospheric grime. After careful study, removal of the varnish and grime from the paint surface, and treatment of small areas of paint loss, the paintings are now in closer alignment with their original appearance.

The 62 prints in the Strauses’ recent bequest have entered the collection of the Fogg Museum. The majority are highly prized impressions that Munch exhibited in his lifetime, and they speak to the aesthetic he preferred for the display of his prints: some of the impressions are cut to the image, and adhered to larger, heavy brown paper, which Munch signed and often dated. Also included are multiple states of single compositions. They showcase the range of techniques the artist used in his printmaking practice: drypoint, etching, lithography, mezzotint, and woodcut, and innovations through the addition of hand-applied color such as watercolor, crayon, and oil, or printing with woodblocks sawn into pieces.
“With this bequest, the Harvard Art Museums have become an important destination for the research of Munch’s prints,” said Elizabeth M. Rudy, the Carl A. Weyerhaeuser Curator of Prints at the Harvard Art Museums. “There are innumerable ways the collection offers opportunities for teaching, exhibition, and further study. Noteworthy for its groups of versions, states, and variations of single compositions, this collection offers wide-ranging insights into Munch’s innovative practice as a printmaker.”
Highlights from the Strauses’ recent gift of prints by Edvard Munch include:

• Six prints from the series Two Human Beings (The Lonely Ones), ranging in date from 1894 to 1917, join an impression that the couple previously gifted in 1991. Together, they showcase the various intriguing woodcut and etching techniques the artist utilized and also show how he manipulated his jigsaw woodblocks to print different parts of a single work in different colors. Closely related to this group is the gift of Young Woman on the Beach (1896), which is a rare example of the artist’s brief exploration of the mezzotint technique.

• Three versions of Vampire II, dated 1895–1902 and all either hand colored or printed in color, join a black lithographic state from 1895 that the couple previously assisted with purchasing. These prints show how Edvard Munch sometimes combined lithographs with hand coloring and also used woodblocks to add color.

• Four impressions of Madonna, dated 1895–1902, join a black lithographic state and a drypoint from 1894 that the couple previously assisted with purchasing. The lithographic prints show a range of examples of hand-applied color (drawn/painted) and printed color.

• One impression of the woodcut Woman’s Head against the Shore (1899) joins two other impressions from the same year, both previous gifts from the Strauses: Woman’s Head against the Shore (1899), printed in turquoise-green and pale and dark orange inks; and Woman’s Head against the Shore (1899), printed in red and three different colors of green ink. These prints show how Munch selectively printed his jigsaw woodblocks, omitting a piece from one of the blocks (the water) in two of the impressions.

• Four different self-portraits are the first such representations of the artist to enter the collection: Self-Portrait (1895), lithograph in crayon and tusche printed in black ink; Self-Portrait with Cigar (1908–9), lithograph printed in black ink; Self-Portrait (1911–12), woodcut; and Self-Portrait with a Bottle of Wine (1930), lithograph printed in black ink.

• There are also rare examples of prints that Edvard Munch printed himself with his small hand-crank press, including Melancholy II (1898), a woodcut (sawn in three pieces) printed in black, red, blue, and yellow inks.

The Jasper Johns print included in the bequest, Savarin (1982), is a lithograph and monotype; it depicts a Savarin-brand coffee can filled with paintbrushes of various sizes. The backdrop incorporates the artist’s signature “crosshatch” work of the 1970s, which is represented in other prints by Johns in the museums’ collections. The arm shown at the bottom of the print is a reference to the skeletal arm shown in Munch’s Self-Portrait from 1895—a connection the couple noted by hanging the two prints near each other in their own home.

HARVARD ART MUSEUMS
32 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

Updated 06-03-2025

13/01/25

Phillips Evening & Day Editions Auction, London - Artists & Artworks Highlights

Phillips Evening & Day Editions Auction, London
Auction viewing: 17 January - 23 January 2025
Auction: 23 - 24 January 2025

Mel Bochner
Amazing, 2012
Estimate: £30,000 - 50,000
Photo © Phillips

Cy Twombly
Roman Notes II, from Roman Notes (B. 22), 1970
Estimate: £30,000 - 50,000
Photo © Phillips

KAWS
UPS AND DOWNS, 2013
Estimate: £30,000 - 50,000
Photo © Phillips

Phillips announces highlights from the Evening & Day Editions Auction, taking place in London on 23 and 24 January. Featuring over 240 works spanning the early 20th century to today, the sale brings together renowned printmakers and contemporary artists, including Banksy, Jasper Johns, and Jonas Wood. Additional highlights include works by Andy Warhol, including a dedicated section inspired by newspapers, alongside pieces by Gerhard Richter, Cy Twombly, KAWS, Yoshitomo Nara, David Hockney, and a selection of editions from The Herbig Collection. The full sale catalogue is now live online, with the public exhibition on view at 30 Berkeley Square from 17 January.
Rebecca Tooby-Desmond, Specialist, Head of Sale, Editions, and Auctioneer, said, “We are excited to kick off the new auction season with a dynamic and diverse offering of works spanning the Modern, Post-War, and Contemporary eras. From the surreal to the sublime, our auctions showcase innovation in edition making, from the ephemeral, avant-garde world of Marcel Broodthaers, through Pop portraits, to the enigmatic, graphic abstraction of Jasper Johns, Cy Twombly and Jonas Wood. Our sale brings together over 240 exceptional lots and we look forward to welcoming collectors and art enthusiasts to our Berkeley Square galleries for the public preview, opening on 17 January.”
Leading the sale is Banksy’s Flower Thrower Triptych (Grey) (2019) [estimate: £100,000–150,000], one of the artist’s most iconic and socially charged images. Depicting a masked figure hurling a bouquet of flowers like a Molotov cocktail, the work juxtaposes themes of resistance and hope, becoming a global symbol of peace. First created as Love is in the Air for Banksy’s 2002 Los Angeles exhibition, the motif gained further significance when stencilled onto Jerusalem’s West Bank Wall in 2003, underscoring its enduring resonance as a timeless call for peace.

Jasper Johns
Corpse and Mirror (U.L.A.E. 169), 1976 
Estimate: £60,000 - 80,000
Photo © Phillips

Jasper Johns’ Corpse and Mirror (1976) is a striking exploration of order and ambiguity, transforming the crosshatch motif into a mesmerising composition. Inspired by a fleeting glimpse of slanted lines on a passing car, Johns executed the work using 36 screens, layering wax-infused ink to create luminous depth and tactility. Produced in collaboration with Simca Print Artists, the screenprint exemplifies Johns’ seamless dialogue between painting and printmaking, inviting viewers into a meditative study of repetition, variation, and perception.

Jonas Wood
Four Majors, 2018
Estimate: £40,000 - 60,000
Photo © Phillips

Jonas Wood’s Four Majors (2018), is a vibrant quartet of screenprints reimagining iconic tennis courts in Melbourne, Paris, London, and New York. Rendered in bold, flat colours with simplified geometric forms, the works blur the line between reality and abstraction, transforming physical spaces into playful, imagined compositions.

Gerhard Richter
Goldberg-Variationen (Goldberg Variations), 
from Hommage à Cladders (B. 60), 1984
Estimate: £40,000 - 60,000
Photo © Phillips

Gerhard Richter’s Goldberg-Variationen (Goldberg Variations) (1984) transforms a phonograph record of Glenn Gould’s 1982 The Goldberg Variations into a vibrant abstract composition, testament to Richter’s fascination with materiality and music. Swathes of cobalt blue and bright yellow paint merge and contrast, with glimpses of the record’s black surface emerging beneath.

Additional highlights include pieces by Cy Twombly, Mel Bochner, KAWS, Ed Ruscha, Yoshitomo Nara, and David Hockney, alongside further works by Banksy.

Yoshitomo Nara
Hand Searching, 2017
Estimate: £25,000 - 35,000
Photo © Phillips

David Hockney
4th February 2021, Flowers in a White Vase with Chair, 2021
Estimate: £25,000 - 35,000
Photo © Phillips

Ed Ruscha
History Kids, from Mountain Prints, 2013
Estimate: £25,000 - 35,000
Photo © Phillips

The sale features 19 works by Andy Warhol, including Saint Apollonia. Inspired by a 15th-century painting attributed to Piero della Francesca, Warhol’s depiction retains much of the original’s detail, including the cracked tempera and gold leaf, while transforming the religious icon into a Pop aesthetic exploration of commodification and originality. Part of his broader engagement with Renaissance art in the 1980s, Saint Apollonia aligns with Warhol’s Details of Renaissance Paintings series, where he likened the cultural prominence of classical masterpieces to modern celebrity. Further Warhol highlights include his celebrated depictions of advertisements.

Andy Warhol
Saint Apollonia (F. & S. 330-333), 1984
Estimate: £25,000-35,000
Photo © Phillips

Andy Warhol
Steaks 99¢ (F. & S. IIIA.68), circa 1986
Estimate: £10,000 – 15,000
Photo © Phillips

Andy Warhol
New York Post (Judge Blasts Lynch) (F. & S. IIIA.46), circa 1983
Estimate: £8,000 – 12,000
Photo © Phillips

After debuting works by Marcel Broodthaers from the Herbig Collection in the fall 2024 Modern & Contemporary Art sales, Phillips is pleased to offer further works from this esteemed collection, including Citron - Citroen Réclame pour la Mer du Nord and Les animaux de la ferme (Farm Animals).

Marcel Broodthaers
Citron - Citroen Réclame pour la Mer du Nord 
(Lemon - Citroen Ad for the North Sea) (V. 19), 1984
Estimate: £5,000 – 7,000
Photo © Phillips

Marcel Broodthaers
Les animaux de la ferme (Farm Animals) (V. 22), 1974
Estimate: £4,000 – 6,000
Photo © Phillips

PHILLIPS LONDON
30 Berkeley Square, London W1J 6EX

21/10/22

Far Away and Close @ Castelli Gallery, NYC with John Chamberlain, Hanne Darboven, Jasper Johns, Robert Morris, Mike and Doug Starn, Lawrence Weiner

FAR AWAY and CLOSE
John Chamberlain, Hanne Darboven, Jasper Johns, Robert Morris, Mike and Doug Starn, Lawrence Weiner
Castelli Gallery, New York
September 29 – November 23, 2022

Castelli Gallery presents FAR AWAY and CLOSE, a group exhibition with works by John Chamberlain, Hanne Darboven, Jasper Johns, Robert Morris, Mike and Doug Starn, and Lawrence Weiner.

The works in the exhibition are realized in a variety of sizes and mediums. Yet, a shared interest in the concept of location, intended both as physical space and a space of mind is what brings them together.

Lawrence Weiner’s Untitled, 1999, a set of six works on paper, showcase the use of tangible space and direction; while the reoccurring phrase, “Caught by ships passing in the night” resonates a feeling of being lost in the metaphorical space. If the work reminds us of movement in space, Hanne Darboven 12 months with Postcards from Today of Horses, 1982, consisting of 12 framed pages of months from the 1982 calendar, remind us of movement in time. Additionally, Hanne Darboven’s collage shows her use of the word heute (“now”) seen across her oeuvre, which she proceeds to cross out, leaving the viewer unsure of the place in time.

A group of John Chamberlain’s collages from View from the Cockpit series show an improbable landscape, at the horizon, as improbable is the landscape in the Mike and Doug Starn photo-collage The No Mind Not Thinks solstil, 2013 and the drawing by Robert Morris 10 Mirrors in a Landscape, 1997. These abstract horizon lines portray an uncertainty in place as it relates to space and time.

Another work by Robert Morris, 1934 Mid-West Dust Storm, 2010, consisting of a drawing made of Epoxy on three aluminum panels, depicts a terrifying sand storm in the Mid-West, something dating from the time he was a child.  This memory of things past reappears in two Untitled drawings by Jasper Johns, in which the artist is including the floorplan of the house where he spent part of his childhood and a reference to the four seasons. In both instances, these recalls in memory showcase the artists’ location at a specific time and place which allows them to return to them through drawing.  

A location can be far away from us, or close. Above all, a location can be a place in the mind, and as such change constantly. Robert Morris Untitled (Location), 1963-1973, contains four mechanisms that requires the installer to manually change the distance depending on where the work is placed on the wall. By creating a work that has the ability to change depending on the space, it evokes a sense of no absolute location.

By bringing together this group of works, the exhibition hopes to bring attention to the similarities between physical space and time when compared to the figurative concept of space of mind.

CASTELLI GALLERY
24 West 40th Street, New York, NY 10018
________________



15/11/21

Jasper Johns Retrospective Exhibition @ Philadelphia Museum of Art & Whitney Museum of American Art

Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
September 29, 2021 – February 13, 2022

The most comprehensive retrospective to date of the work of Jasper Johns, organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, is presented simultaneously in New York and Philadelphia. A single exhibition in two venues, this unprecedented collaboration, Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror, is the artist’s first major museum retrospective on the US East Coast in a quarter century. 

Resulting from five years of scholarship and an inventive rethinking of Jasper Johns’s art, the exhibition contains nearly 500 works. It is the most comprehensive exhibition ever devoted to Jasper Johns, creating an opportunity to highlight not only his well-known masterpieces but also many works that have never been exhibited publicly. Structured around the principles of mirroring and doubling that have long been a focus of the artist’s work, this two-part exhibition, which follows a loose chronological order from the 1950s to the present, offers an innovative curatorial model for a monographic survey. It chronicles Jasper Johns’s accomplishments across many mediums—including paintings, sculpture, drawings, prints, working proofs, and monotypes—and highlight the complex relationships among them.
Adam D. Weinberg, the Whitney’s Alice Pratt Brown Director, commented, “We are delighted to present this unique retrospective together with the Philadelphia Museum of Art, an important occasion for both museums, which have had connections with the artist going back decades. The Whitney has been collecting and showing Johns since the 1960s and we are thrilled to celebrate his extraordinary career. Enigmatic, poetic, rich, and profoundly influential, Johns’s work is always ripe for reexamination.”

“Given the crucial place that Jasper Johns holds in the art of our time, this collaboration enables our two museums, together, to examine the artist’s vision in all its multiplicity and depth,” added Timothy Rub, the George D. Widener Director and CEO, Philadelphia Museum of Art. “The Philadelphia Museum of Art has long dedicated a gallery to the display of Johns’s work, which, given his admiration of Cézanne and Duchamp, richly resonates with our collection. Along with our colleagues at the Whitney, we hope to introduce a new generation of visitors in our respective cities to the exceptional achievements of this artist over the course of a career that now spans nearly seven decades.”
Since the early 1950s, Jasper Johns (b. 1930) has produced a radical and varied body of work distinguished by constant reinvention. In his twenties, Johns created his now-canonical Flag (1954–55), which challenged the dominance of Abstract Expressionism by integrating abstraction and representation through its direct, though painterly, deadpan visual power. His works have continued to pose similar paradoxes—between cognition and perception, image and object, painting and sculpture—and have explored new approaches to abstraction and figuration that have opened up perspectives for several generations of younger artists. Over the course of his career, he has tirelessly pursued an innovative body of work that includes painting, sculpture, drawing, prints, books, and the design of sets and costumes for the stage.

The exhibition is conceived as a unified whole, comprising two autonomous parts, and is co-curated by two longtime scholars who each has a close relationship with the artist: Carlos Basualdo, The Keith L. and Katherine Sachs Senior Curator of Contemporary Art at the PMA, and Scott Rothkopf, Senior Deputy Director and Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator at the Whitney. Basualdo noted, “We attempted to create an exhibition that echoes the logic of Johns’s work, and it is structured in a mimetic relation to his practice. Galleries at each venue will serve as cognates, echoes, and inversions of their counterparts at the other, allowing viewers to witness and experience the relationships between continuity and change, fragment and whole, singularity and repetition which Johns has used throughout his career to renew and transform his work.” Rothkopf said, “One of our primary aims was to revivify the incredible sense of daring and discovery at the heart of Johns’s art. He stunned the establishment as a young man but continues to astonish audiences with surprising new ideas into his nineties. Surveying the whole of his career, we see an artist propelled by curiosity, constantly challenging himself—and all of us.”

The full breadth of the exhibition offers visitors an opportunity to appreciate not only Jasper Johns’s most iconic paintings and sculptures but also his works on paper, which represent some of the most inventive prints and drawings created during the past fifty years. The structure of the exhibition opens a window onto the beauty, meaning, and remarkable artistic order that organizes Jasper Johns’s work. Inspired by the artist’s fascination with mirroring, symmetry, reversals, and doubles, the exhibition’s two halves mirror one another. The retrospective is divided between the two venues, with pairs of related galleries designed to illuminate a different aspect of Jasper Johns’s thought and work through a specific methodological lens, whether by spotlighting themes, processes, images, mediums, and even emotional states. For example, one pair of galleries explores the effect of specific places and communities on Jasper Johns’s art, with a room at the PMA devoted to his formative time in Japan and one at the Whitney focused on South Carolina, where he spent part of his childhood and later worked as a young adult. Other pairs of galleries re-creates exhibitions Jasper Johns staged at the Leo Castelli gallery in 1960 and 1968, respectively, and highlight his groundbreaking use of found motifs, as seen in a gallery at the Whitney devoted to his Flags and Maps and another at the PMA focused on his recurrent fascination with numbers. The unique double-venue framework aims to challenge the traditional format of the retrospective as a unified overarching and univocal narrative, providing an alternative model for tracing the arc of an artist’s lifework.

Drawing significantly on its collection of 216 works by Jasper Johns, the Whitney’s display occupies the entirety of its 18,000-square-foot, fifth-floor Neil Bluhm Family Galleries, the building’s largest contiguous exhibition space, and the adjacent Kaufman Gallery. The Whitney’s installation consists of more than 250 objects from domestic and international public and private collections, including nearly fifty works from the artist’s own collection, many of which are largely unknown to the public. At the Whitney, a progression of approximately eleven galleries tracks the artist’s surprising evolution, with each gallery custom-built to create dramatic installations that emphasize specific aspects of Jasper Johns’s thought. One highlight is a gallery of his early Flags and Maps, organized as a stately faceoff between examples in color and those in black-and-white to evoke powerful associations about a divided United States. To accompany the Whitney’s own Three Flags, 1958—one of the icons of the Museum’s collection—many extraordinary loans have been secured for the occasion, including White Flag, 1955 (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York); Flag on Orange Field, 1957 (Museum Ludwig, Cologne), and Flags, 1965 (artist's collection, on long-term loan to the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis). The gallery is also reunite Jasper Johns's three monumental Map paintings from the early 1960s for the first time in more than twenty years.

Another gallery reveals Jasper Johns’s unique approach to printmaking through a suite of fifteen large-scale Savarin monotypes, which find him exploring variations on image and palette to astonishing effect. Taking advantage of the Whitney’s signature views, another gallery features Jasper Johns’s recent sculptures bathed in natural light against the panoramic sweep of the Hudson River. Other major loans include the pivotal According to What, 1964 (private collection, on long-term loan to the PMA), the subject of an entire gallery; Harlem Light, 1967 (promised gift to the Seattle Art Museum); and Montez Singing, 1989 (private collection), a celebrated painting indicative of the artist's 1980s style—all three works have not been on view in New York since the 1990s. A gallery exploring Jasper Johns’s recent work offers a poignant meditation on works related to the themes of mortality and longing. Acting as a mirror between the two venues, an edition of Jasper Johns’s landmark sculpture of two Ballantine ale cans, Painted Bronze, 1960, appears at each venue—the Whitney’s from the artist’s collection and the PMA’s from Museum Ludwig, Cologne.

The Philadelphia Museum of Art’s equally comprehensive display spreads across eleven rooms in the Dorrance Special Exhibition Galleries and adjoining Korman Galleries. It features approximately 250 works by the artist from both public and private collections in the US and abroad, including approximately sixty works from the artist’s collection, many of which have never been exhibited to the public before. Upon entering the installation visitors are confronted by Flag, 1954–55 (Museum of Modern Art), Jasper Johns’s earliest extant flag painting, an undisputable masterpiece of contemporary art and among the most influential images ever produced by an American artist. Flag is followed by a gallery of the artist’s groundbreaking early works, including Painting with Two Balls, 1960 (collection of the artist), Fool’s House, 1961–62 (private collection), and Target, 1958 (collection of the artist). A gallery dedicated to the artist’s treatment of numbers, a signature motif Jasper Johns has explored throughout his career, features a suite of four large paintings on the theme of 0 through 9, made between 1960 and 1961, photographs by the Italian artist Ugo Mulas of Jasper Johns’s masterful drawing 0 through 9, and the extraordinary set of color lithographs that Jasper Johns produced in 1969. Among the extraordinary loans to Philadelphia is Untitled, 1972 (Museum Ludwig, Cologne), a key work, which has not traveled since 1996 and is the focus of an entire gallery. Philadelphia devotes a section of the show to exploring Jasper Johns’s enduring relationship with Japan and Japanese culture, which dates to his Army service there in 1953 and further developed during return visits in 1964 and 1966. This section includes works that he made in Japan, such as the two existing versions of Souvenir (collection of the artist) and Souvenir 2 (private collection), both of 1964, several works on paper, as well as works by Japanese artists in Jasper Johns’s collection.

Echoing the Whitney’s presentation of Savarin monotypes, a gallery in Philadelphia is dedicated to a captivating display of working proofs from the 1990s, illuminating the artist’s daring experimentation in the medium of printmaking. A gallery of recent work features Jasper Johns’s extraordinary 5 Postcards, 2011 (private collection), and Untitled, 2018 (private collection), based on a photograph of a soldier, Lance Corporal James Farley, taken during the Vietnam War by LIFE photographer Larry Burrows, a motif that Jasper Johns has used in a number of recent works, along with several recent drawings and paintings that have never been exhibited before, including a series devoted to the theme of skeletons. In Philadelphia, one entire room is devoted to the display of a large selection of prints by the artist, exhibited according to the strategies developed by John Cage in his celebrated exhibition Rolywholyover A Circus, in an homage to the close friendship between the artist and the musician.

CATALOGUE

Jasper Johns
Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Whitney Museum of American Art
The two-venue exhibition is accompanied by a single publication conceived as a key and fulcrum to the retrospective’s bipartite structure. The fully illustrated catalogue, Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror, include introductory texts by Basualdo and Rothkopf, and feature essays by a diverse group of sixteen authors, who include established art historians of Jasper Johns’s work along with new voices of emerging scholars, writers, and artists, in order to resituate Jasper Johns in the vitality of the present. Contributors include Emmanuel Alloa, Andrianna Campbell-LaFleur, Carroll Dunham, Flavio Fergonzi, Ruth Fine, Michio Hayashi, Terrance Hayes, Michael Ann Holly, Ralph Lemon, Alexander Nemerov, R.H. Quaytman, Jennifer L. Roberts, Drew Sawyer, Sandra Skurvida, Colm Tóibín, and Hannah Yohalem. A selection of archival materials illuminates each institution’s long history with the artist. The unique book joins the two halves of the exhibition into one engaging whole, providing a new perspective on Jasper Johns’s entire career. Co-published by the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art, the book contains 348 pages and 680 illustrations. It is distributed throughout the world by Yale University Press.

ABOUT JASPER JOHNS

Jasper Johns (b. Augusta, Georgia, 1930) grew up in South Carolina where he pursued an interest in art at an early age. He attended the University of South Carolina before moving to New York in 1948, and briefly attended Parsons School of Design. For two years he served in the army and was stationed in South Carolina and Japan. He returned to New York in 1953, where he met Robert Rauschenberg, John Cage, and Merce Cunningham, with whom he would famously collaborate. His work has been the subject of numerous retrospectives and solo shows, including Jasper Johns: A Retrospective at the Jewish Museum (1964), Jasper Johns at the Whitney (1977), Jasper Johns: Works Since 1974 at the PMA (1988–89, which traveled to the Venice Biennale, where Johns was awarded the Golden Lion Award for Lifetime Achievement), Jasper Johns: A Retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (1996–97, the last comprehensive East Coast survey), and most recently Jasper Johns: ‘Something Resembling Truth’ at the Royal Academy, London, and The Broad, Los Angeles (2017–18). The innovative collaboration and structure of the Whitney and PMA’s retrospective distinguishes it from these previous shows and accounts not only for the complexity and originality of Jasper Johns’s body of work at a new scale, but also seeks to test some of the conventional perceptions of it.

ABOUT THE CURATORS

The organizing curators are Carlos Basualdo, Keith L. and Katherine Sachs Senior Curator of Contemporary Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Scott Rothkopf, Senior Deputy Director and Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, with Sarah B. Vogelman, Exhibition Assistant, in Philadelphia and Lauren Young, Curatorial Assistant, in New York.

CARLOS BASUALDO, the Keith L. and Katherine Sachs Senior Curator of Contemporary Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, was the lead organizer of Bruce Nauman: Topological Gardens, which represented the United States at the Venice Biennale and was awarded the Golden Lion for Best National Participation in 2007. He also organized Michelangelo Pistoletto: From One to Many, 1956–1974 (2010), which traveled to MAXXI (Museo nazionale delle arti del secolo XXI); Dancing Around the Bride: Cage, Cunningham, Johns, Rauschenberg and Duchamp, 2012, (with Erica Battle) which traveled to the Barbican Gallery; Embracing the Contemporary: The Collection of Keith L. and Katherine Sachs (2016); and Bruce Nauman, Contrapposto Studies (2017). Basualdo served on the curatorial teams for Documenta11, the 50th Venice Biennale, and organized Tropicalia: A Revolution in Brazilian Culture (2004-5), which was seen at the MCA Chicago, Barbican Gallery, London, Bronx Museum, New York, and the Museu de Arte Moderna, in Rio de Janeiro. From 2010 until 2013 he served as curator at large at MAXXI Arte, in Rome, Italy.

SCOTT ROTHKOPF is the Senior Deputy Director and Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art. He joined the Whitney’s staff in 2009 as curator and in that role has served as a curator or co-curator for Glenn Ligon: AMERICA (2011), Wade Guyton OS (2012), Sinister Pop (2012), Singular Visions (2010), Jeff Koons: A Retrospective (2014), America Is Hard to See (2015), Open Plan: Andrea Fraser (2016), Human Interest: Portraits from the Whitney’s Collection (2016), Virginia Overton: Sculpture Gardens (2016), Laura Owens (2017) and Nick Mauss: Transmissions (2018). Previously, he served as Senior Editor of Artforum.

PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART
2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19130

WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART
99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY 10014

07/02/19

Jasper Johns @ Matthew Marks Gallery, New York

Jasper Johns: Recent Paintings & Works on Paper
Matthew Marks Gallery, New York
February 9 - April 6, 2019 

Matthew Marks presents Jasper Johns: Recent Paintings & Works on Paper in his gallery at 522 West 22nd Street. The exhibition includes fifteen paintings and forty works on paper made since 2012.

Two 2018 paintings, as well as a group of new drawings, are based on a photograph of a soldier, Lance Corporal James Farley, taken during the Vietnam War by LIFE magazine photographer Larry Burrows. The soldier is seen at the end of a long day, head in his hands after a failed mission. Stenciled at the top and bottom of both canvases are the words “FARLEY BREAKS DOWN / AFTER LARRY BURROWS.”

Also on view are four paintings and three works on paper from the Regrets series, all completed after the exhibition of the same name at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 2014. Like the Farley series, they are based on an image of a man covering his face, in this case a photograph of Lucian Freud seated on a bed. In the catalogue that accompanies the current exhibition, Alexi Worth writes that these series both “show Johns breaking what seemed like foundational prohibitions against outright depiction and unguarded emotion.” The artist’s willingness to contradict himself may account for the perpetual surprises in his long career. “I think you can be more than one person,” Jasper Johns has said. “I think I am more than one person. Unfortunately.”

In two other new paintings, Jasper Johns revisits his Seasons paintings of the mid-1980s. Like them, the new canvases feature the artist’s shadow flanked by motifs from his earlier work. In the 2018 paintings, however, the shadow is overlaid with a skeleton wearing a hat. Accompanying these paintings are two dozen related works on paper, including drawings in ink and charcoal on paper or ink on plastic, as well as several prints.

In October 2020, Jasper Johns’s work will be the subject of a major retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Shown at both institutions simultaneously, it will be the artist’s most comprehensive exhibition to date.

MATTHEW MARKS GALLERY
www.matthewmarks.com

02/10/15

Expo Picasso.mania, Grand Palais, Paris

Picasso.mania
Grand Palais, Paris 
7 octobre 2015 - 29 février 2016 

La vingtaine d’expositions (monographiques ou collectives) qui, depuis 1973 se sont attachées à l’étude de la postérité de l’œuvre de Pablo Picasso témoignent de son impact sur la création contemporaine. A la fois chronologique et thématique, le parcours de l’exposition du Grand Palais retrace les moments de la réception critique et artistique de l’œuvre de Picasso, les étapes de la formation du mythe associé à son nom.

Des natures mortes cubistes aux Mousquetaires des expositions d’Avignon de 1970 et 1973, le parcours de l’exposition est ponctué d’œuvres de Picasso, issues des collections du Musée national Picasso-Paris, du Musée National d’art Moderne, ainsi que des collections de la famille de l’artiste. Leur présentation s’inspire des accrochages réalisés par l’artiste dans ses ateliers, et des expositions qu’il a lui-même supervisées (Galerie Georges Petit à Paris en 1932, Palais des Papes à Avignon en 1970 et 1973).

Aux grandes phases stylistiques (cubisme, œuvre tardif...), aux œuvres emblématiques de Pablo Picasso (Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, Guernica) répondent des créations contemporaines présentées dans des salles monographiques (David Hockney, Jasper Johns, Roy Lichtenstein, Martin Kippenberger...) ou thématiques, regroupant des œuvres mêlant techniques et supports les plus variés (vidéos, peintures, sculptures, arts graphiques, films, photographies, installations…).

Les montages Polaroïd, les images vidéos multi-écrans de David Hockney font écho au cubisme de Picasso, à son exploration d’un espace polyfocal. Au début des années 60, les artistes Pop, de part et d’autre de l’Atlantique (Lichtenstein, Errό…) s’emparent des portraits des années 30 par lesquels s’est fixée l’image archétypale de la peinture de Picasso. L’Ombre (1954) est à l’origine de la série de quatre tableaux qu’entreprend Jasper Johns en 1985 (Les Quatre saisons rassemblées, sont présentées dans l’exposition). Témoignant de l’impact de l’image publique de Picasso sur l’imaginaire des artistes du XXe siècle, à deux reprises, en 1988 et en 1995, Martin Kippenberger interprète les portraits photographiques de Picasso et de Jacqueline réalisés par David Douglas Duncan.

Les variations, inspirées par Les Demoiselles d’Avignon et par Guernica, démontrent la place occupée par ces peintures dans l’histoire de l’art moderne et, au-delà, dans l’imaginaire collectif (ces deux œuvres ne sont pas présentées dans l’exposition compte tenu de leur déplacement impossible). Acte de naissance du modernisme pictural, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon ont fait l’objet de variations, (par Faith Ringgold, Robert Colescott…), qui commentent la dimension ethnocentrée, masculine, de cette modernité dont l’œuvre est devenu l’emblème.

D’une lecture historique de Guernica par Emir Kusturica à la révélation du rôle symbolique joué par sa transposition en tapisserie ornant les murs du conseil de sécurité des Nations Unies (Goshka Macuga, The Nature of the Beast, 2009), de l’utilisation du tableau de Picasso dans la lutte des artistes américains opposés à la guerre du Vietnam aux manifestations de rue qui en brandissent l’image, une salle montre comment Guernica s’est muée en icône sociale et politique universelle.

A la faveur d’expositions qui l’ont réinscrit au cœur de la création contemporaine (A New Spirit in Painting, Royal Academy of Arts, 1981) ou qui en ont éclairé le sens (Das Spätwerk. Themen :1964-1972, Bâle, 1981 ; The Last Years, Guggenheim Museum, 1984), les œuvres des dernières années de Pablo Picasso sont redevenues sources d’inspiration. Son éclectisme stylistique, son « cannibalisme » des maîtres anciens, la libre facture des peintures tardives ont inspiré la génération d’artistes révélée au début des années 80 (Georg Baselitz, Jean-Michel Basquiat, George Condo, Julian Schnabel, Vincent Corpet…).

L’installation vidéo de Rineke Dijkstra, I see a Woman Crying (Weeping Woman, 2009-2010) illustre la présence de l’œuvre de Pablo Picasso dans l’imaginaire actuel, dans ses expressions les plus variées, du cinéma aux images numériques, de la vidéo à la bande dessinée.

Cette exposition est organisée par la Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais, le Centre Pompidou et le Musée national Picasso-Paris.

Commissaire général : Didier Ottinger, conservateur général du Patrimoine, directeur adjoint du Musée national d’Art moderne - Centre Pompidou
Commissaires : Diana Widmaier-Picasso, historienne de l’art
Emilie Bouvard, conservatrice du Patrimoine au Musée national Picasso-Paris

Picasso.mania : Les artistes exposés

Adel Abdessemed (1971, Constantine, Algérie)
Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou (1965, Porto-Novo, Bénin)
Pierre Alechinsky (1927, Bruxelles, Belgique)
Arman (1928, Nice, France - 2005, New York, Etats-Unis)
Art Workers Coalition (collectif américain actif de 1969 à 1971)
Enrico Baj (1924, Milan, Italie - 2003, Vergiate, Italie)
Rudolf Baranik (1920, Lithuanie - 1998, El Dorado, Etats-Unis)
Miquel Barceló (1957, Félanitx, Espagne)
Georg Baselitz (1938, Deutschbaselitz, Allemagne)
Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960, Brooklyn, Etats-Unis -1988)
Joseph Beuys (1921, Krefeld, Allemagne - 1986, Düsseldorf, Allemagne)
Mike Bidlo (1953, Chicago, Etats-Unis)
Pol Bury (1922, Haine-Saint-Pierre, Belgique - 2005, Paris, France )
Maurizio Cattelan (1969, Padoue, Italie)
Christo Javacheff (1935, Gabrovo, Bulgarie)
Robert Colescott (1925, Oakland, Etats-Unis - 2009, Tucson, Etats-Unis)
George Condo (1957, Concord, Etats-Unis)
Vincent Corpet (1958, Paris, France)
Equipo Crónica (collectif espagnol actif de 1964 à 1981)
Alan Davie (1920, Grangemouth - Royaume-Uni-2014)
Walter De Maria (1934, Albany, Etats-Unis - 2013, New York, Etats-Unis)
Niki De Saint Phalle (1930, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France - 2002, San Diego, Etats-Unis)
Rineke Dijkstra (1959, Sittard, Pays-Bas)
Erró (Gudmundur Gudmundsson) (1932, Olafsvik, Islande)
Öyvind Fahlström (1928, São Paulo, Brésil -1976, Stockholm, Suède)
Zeng Fanzhi (1964, Wuhan, Chine)
Dan Flavin (1933, New York, Etats-Unis - 1996, New York, Etats-Unis)
Jean-Luc Godard (1930, Paris, France)
Leon Golub (1922, Chicago, Etas-Unis - 2004, New-York, Etats Unis)
Renato Guttuso (1911, Bagheria, Italie - 1987, Rome, Italie)
Richard Hamilton (1922, Pimlico, Royaume - Uni-2011, Londres, Royaume-Uni)
Romuald Hazoumé (1962, Porto-Novo, République du Bénin)
David Hockney (1937, Bradford, Royaume-Uni)
Thomas Houseago (1972, Leeds, Royaume-Uni)
Jean-Olivier Hucleux (1923, Chauny, France - 2012, Paris, France)
Robert Indiana (1928, New Castle, Etats-Unis)
Jasper Johns (1930, Augusta, Etats-Unis)
Donald Judd (1928, Excelsior Springs, Etats-Unis - 1994, New York, Etats-Unis)
Martin Kippenberger (1953, Dortmund, Allemagne - 1997, Vienne, Autriche)
Ronald B. Kitaj (1932, Chagrin Falls, Etats-Unis - 2007, Los Angeles, Etats-Unis)
Jeff Koons (1955, York, Etats-Unis)
Emir Kusturica (1954, Sarajevo, Yougoslavie)
Wifredo Lam (1902, Sagua La Grande, Cuba - 1982, Paris, France)
Bertrand Lavier (1949, Châtillon-sur-Seine, France)
Roy Lichtenstein (1923, New York, Etats Unis - 1997, New York, Etats Unis)
Goshka Macuga (1976, Varsovie, Pologne)
André Masson (1896, Balagny-sur-Thérain, France - 1987, Paris, France)
Paul Mc Carthy (1945, Salt Lake City, Etats-Unis)
Joan Miró (1893, Barcelone, Espagne - 1983, Palma de Majorque, Espagne)
Malcolm Morley (1931, Londres, Royaume-Uni)
Robert Motherwell (1915, Aberdeen, Etats-Unis-1991, Provincetown, Etats-Unis)
Wangechi Mutu (1972, Nairobi, Kenya)
Louise Nevelson (1899, Perislav, Ukraine -1988, New York, Etats-Unis)
Claes Oldenburg (1929, Stockholm, Suède)
Eduardo Paolo (1924, Leith, Royaume-Uni - 2005, Londres, Royaume-Uni)
Richard Pettibone (1938, Los Angeles, Etats-Unis)
Pablo Picasso (1881, Malaga, Espagne - 1973, Mougins, France)
Edouard Pignon (1905, Bully-les-Mines, France - 1993, La Couture-Boussey, France)
Sigmar Polke (1941, Oels, Pologne - 2010, Cologne, Allemagne)
Richard Prince (1949, Panama)
André Raffray (1925, Nonancourt, France - 2010, Paris, France)
Robert Rauschenberg (1925, Port Arthur, Etats-Unis - 2008, Captiva, Etats-Unis)
Faith Ringgold (1930, New-York, Etats-Unis)
Larry Rivers (1923, New York, Etats-Unis - 2002, New York, Etats-Unis)
James Rosenquist (1933, Grand Forks, Etats-Unis)
Chéri Samba (1956, Kinto M’Vuila, Congo)
Antonio Saura (1930, Huesca, Espagne - 1998, Cuenca, Espagne)
Julian Schnabel (1951, New York)
Frank Stella (1936, Malden, Etats-Unis)
Rudolf Stingel (1956, Merano, Italie)
Antoni Tàpies (1923, Barcelone, Espagne - 2012, Barcelone, Espagne)
Hervé Télémaque (1937, Port-au-Prince, Haïti)
Jean Tinguely (1925, Fribourg, Suisse - 1991, Berne, Suisse)
Cy Twombly (1928, Lexington, Etats-Unis - 2011, Rome, Italie)
Francesco Vezzoli (1971, Brescia, Italie)
Andy Warhol (1928, Pittsburgh, Etats Unis - 1987, New York, Etats Unis)
Yan Pei-Ming (1960, Shanghai, Chine)

Picasso.mania : Catalogue de l’exposition


Editions de la Réunion des musées nationaux - Grand Palais, Paris 2015
24,5 x 29 cm, autour de 340 pages, 390 illustrations - 49 €
parution le 14 septembre

Sommaire :
Sollers vers Picasso recueilli par Stéphane Guégan et Didier Ottinger
Les féministes chez Barbe Bleue par Catherine Millet
Salut l’artiste! : œuvres exposées
Les linogravures de Picasso par Céline Chicha-Castex
Picasso et les arts ( cinéma, danse, théâtre et art vidéo) par Diana Widmaier-Picasso
Le Cubisme, un espace polyfocal (dépliant)
David Hockney par Didier Ottinger
Les Demoiselles africaines par Émilie Bouvard
Les Demoiselles (dépliant)
Les Demoiselles d’ailleurs : œuvres exposées
Guernica et la New Left artistique par Émilie Bouvard
Guernica (dépliant)
Guernica, icône politique : œuvres exposées
Picasso goes pop par Annabelle Ténèze
C’est du Picasso (dépliant)
Picasso Pop : œuvres exposées
Rineke Dijkstra par Émilia Philippot
Applaudimètre étalon par Didier Semin
L’atelier du minotaure (dépliant)
Jasper Johns par Joachim Pissarro
Et l’étoile se mit à filer… par Stéphane Guégan
Star system : œuvres exposées
Martin Kippenberger par Didier Ottinger
Picasso : un héritage embarrassant par Didier Ottinger
Un jeune peintre en Avignon (dépliant)
La sculpture de Picasso et après… par Diana Widmaier-Picasso
Un accueil mondial par Michael C. FitzGerald
Bad painting : œuvres exposées
Annexes
Réception artistique et critique 1960-2015 par Camille Chenais
Bibliographie
Liste des œuvres exposées
Index

Autres publications (sélection)

• L’album de l’exposition
par Didier Ottinger
éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux - Grand Palais, Paris 2015
10 €, 21 x 26,5 cm, Broché, 48 pages, 40 illustrations
parution le 14 septembre


L’album, tout en suivant le parcours de l’exposition, confronte des oeuvres de Picasso et celles des artistes qu’il a inspirés : Picasso - Hockney, Picasso - Johns, Picasso - Kippenberger, Picasso - Rineke Dijkstra et surtout une confrontation Picasso - Duchamp dont l’oeuvre « résonne dans l’esprit, met en question les processus de jugements de l’esprit lui-même (...) un art critique qui explore les mythes de la culture, face à l’oeuvre de Picasso, fait «d’exubérance et d’émotion directe», qui vise « un maximum d’émotion et de plénitude visuelle » ( R. Morris, « American Quarter », Art in America, New York, 1981).

• Picasso, 25 chefs-d’oeuvre expliqués aux enfants
par Elisabeth de Lambilly, auteur à la Rmn-GP de A comme Abécédaire de l’art et de A comme
Abécédaire des animaux... et de nombreux autres titres aux Editions Palette notamment.
Editions de la Réunion des musées nationaux - Grand Palais, Paris 2015
13,50 €, 18 x 22 cm, Relié, 64 pages, 25 illustrations
parution le 7 octobre


Cette nouvelle collection, les Incontournables de l’Art, propose d’entrer dans l’univers d’un peintre à partir d’un choix de 25 œuvres emblématiques d’un artiste, d’une manière très didactique et ludique. Guidé par des textes courts et très descriptifs le jeune lecteur «entre» véritablement dans le processus de création de l’artiste. Destiné aux lecteurs de 9 ans et plus, ce titre permet aux enfants d’aborder l’univers et de s’approprier l’œuvre du peintre. Il constitue ainsi une superbe et ludique introduction au monde de Picasso.

Grand Palais, Paris
Galeries nationales
Entrée square Jean Perrin
Informations et réservations : www.grandpalais.fr

10/07/04

Jasper Johns, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh - "Past Things and Present: Jasper Johns Since 1983" Exhibition

Past Things and Present  
Jasper Johns Since 1983
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
10 July – 19 September 2004

A major exhibition at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art includes more than 90 works by the iconic American artist JASPER JOHNS: this is their first and only showing at a UK venue and it is Johns’s first exhibition in Britain in almost thirty years. Past Things and Present: Jasper Johns Since 1983 explores the artist’s work of the last two decades through a selection of related paintings, prints and drawings that demonstrate his continually evolving and innovative talent. The exhibition introduces new motifs that present a marked shift in his approach to image-making. 

One of the forerunners of Pop Art, Jasper Johns has exercised a profound influence on western painting of the second half of the twentieth century. Born in Augusta, Georgia, in 1930, he moved to New York in the early 1950s and quickly earned critical acclaim for his paintings of flags, targets, letters and numbers.

Past Things and Present highlights Jasper Johns’s practice of reworking motifs – which include faces, watches and his mysterious ‘Green Angel’ – in different media. The exhibition will include numerous works related to The Seasons, Jasper Johns’s four-part cycle of images begun in 1985 as well as a series of works which incorporate traced outlines from paintings by Holbein, Grünewald and Picasso.

Jasper Johns has consistently reinvented himself in response to new stimuli and since the early 1980s his imagery has become increasingly autobiographical. His recent work is full of references to his studio and home, to his childhood and to his own work and the work of other artists. In 1984 he stated:
“In my early work I tried to hide my personality, my psychological state, my emotions… I sort of stuck to my guns for a while, but eventually it seemed like a losing battle. Finally, one must simply drop the reserve.”
Past Things and Present is part of the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art’s Year of American Art. Throughout 2004–5, the Gallery is showing work by some of the giants of post-war and contemporary American art including Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha and Cindy Sherman.

The exhibition is organised by the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and has toured to Greenville County Museum of Art, South Carolina. Following its European debut at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, it will travel to Institut Valencià d’Art Modern (IVAM) in Valencia and the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin.

An illustrated catalogue for the exhibition is available.

SCOTTISH NATIONAL GALLERY OF MODERN ART 
75 Belford Road, Edinburgh 

21/01/99

Jasper Johns: Process and Printmaking at Philadelphia Museum of Art


Prints By Jasper Johns Provide Insights To Creative Process

Jasper Johns: Process and Printmaking, an exhibition on view at the Philadelphia Museum of Art from January 23 through April 4, 1999, presents 125 proofs and edition prints drawn almost entirely from the artist's personal collection. Among them are 30 completed works that are shown alongside their preliminary proofs, providing insight into the artist's complicated working process. Jasper Johns: Process and Printmaking will be installed in the Berman and Stieglitz Galleries on the Museum's ground floor.

JASPER JOHNS was at the center of the "painter-printmaker" revolution of the 1960s and was preeminent among a group of artists who broke with tradition by devoting themselves equally to both media. His works on paper, which frequently echo the imagery and themes of his paintings, continue to represent an important and integral component of his work. During the course of his intense exploration of the printmaking medium, Jasper Johns has expanded the possibilities of each of the print techniques he has used. At the same time, he has incorporated the concepts intrinsic to printmaking—reflection, reversal and transfer—into other aspects of his art, such as painting and sculpture.

Experimentation and variation are central to Jasper Johns's work. He has stated, "I think that the picture isn't pre-formed, I think it is formed as it is made; and might be anything." Jasper Johns's painting method, while involving constant alteration and feedback, produces completed works that bear little (if any) evidence of the stages of their dramatic development. His prints result from a similar approach, but the proofs made during the process allow the viewer to glimpse specific points in each work's evolution.

Beginning in the early 1960s, Jasper Johns often would embellish early stages of his prints with chalk, crayon, paint, and ink while he refined his imagery. These "thoughts, experiments, and asides," as Jasper Johns has called the proofs, reveal the unfolding of his painstaking working process.

Works by Jasper Johns figure prominently in the galleries of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The Department of 20th-Century Art includes Johns's Sculpmetal Numbers (1963) in its permanent collection, and its galleries have long been graced with loans of important works by the artist, including the painted bronze Savarin Can with Brushes and Painting with Two Balls (both 1960). The Department of Prints, Drawings and Photographs has an extensive permanent collection of works on paper by Jasper Johns, including some 80 prints and proofs, a drawing, and a group of posters. Jasper Johns has previously been the subject of two Museum exhibitions: Jasper Johns — Prints: 1960-1970, which was presented in 1970, and Jasper Johns: Works Since 1974, which was organized for the Venice Biennale of 1988-1989.
Jasper Johns: Process and Printmaking, organized by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, was sponsored by Philip Morris Companies, Inc. Additional support was provided by the National Endowment for the Arts. In Philadelphia, the exhibition is coordinating by John Ittmann, Curator of Prints at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.