Showing posts with label cartoonists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cartoonists. Show all posts

01/02/25

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston @ Jewish Museum, New York

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out 
Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston
Jewish Museum, New York
Through March 30, 2025

TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK
"Schlep and Screw, Knowledge Rental Pawn Exchange Service," 2017 
Acrylic and mixed media on canvas, 
60 x 60 x 6 in. (152.4 x 152.4 x 15.2 cm) 
Collection of Hedy Fischer and Randy Shull, 
Asheville, North Carolina

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston examines Philip Guston’s seminal influence on Trenton Doyle Hancock and both artists’ shared commitment to investigating the legacy of white supremacism in the United States. The exhibition presents the the work of painter PHILIP GUSTON (American, b. Canada 1913–1980), the child of Jewish immigrants from Odessa (present-day Ukraine), and TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK (American, b. 1974), a leading Black contemporary artist based in Houston, Texas, in dialogue for the first time. The exhibition explores resonant connections between their work and the role that artists play in the pursuit of social justice.

Organized by the Jewish Museum, the exhibition features key works by Philip Guston including his now iconic, late satirical Ku Klux Klan paintings in dialogue with major works Trenton Doyle Hancock created in response to his inspirational mentor, highlighting their parallel thematic explorations of the nature of evil, self-representation, otherness, and art activism. Foregrounding works that depict the Klan, the exhibition demonstrates how both artists engage with and at times even inhabit these hateful figures to explore their own identities and more broadly examine systems of institutionalized power and their feelings of complicity within them. Yet, despite the difficult subject matter and at times violent imagery presented in their work, both Hancock and Guston share an ability to conquer the pain and emotion of their art through humor that is both dark and undeniable, engaging with their shared embrace of the visual language of comics.

Philip Guston, whose early social realist and abstract work ultimately evolved into an idiosyncratic form of social satire, is now one of the most revered painters of the twentieth century. Significant examples of Guston’s buffoonish Klansmen paintings and drawings from the late 1960s and early 1970s, selected by Hancock, will be a centerpiece of the exhibition. Guston’s cartoonish style was used to defy the Klan’s bigotry as racial tensions roiled America—tensions that continue to resonate with renewed urgency today. Guston also used the hooded figure as an alter-ego wrestling with his Jewish identity and his assimilation into American culture. This phenomenon is illustrated especially in Guston’s masterful The Studio (1969), which depicts the artist as a Klansman painting a self-portrait, acknowledging his own complicity with white supremacy. 

For the eclectic artist, cartoonist, and illustrator Trenton Doyle Hancock, Guston’s work has been a consistent source of inspiration for nearly 30 years. His collaged psychedelic canvases similarly draw on the language of comics to challenge and comment upon the American condition. The exhibition includes Hancock’s surreal graphic memoir that interweaves Guston’s biography with his own family tree and reports of Klan activity in the United States, past and present. Titled Epidemic! Presents: Step and Screw! (2014), the series has since developed into a substantial body of work in which Hancock’s long-standing avatar, a Black superhero named Torpedoboy, meets and engages with Guston’s Klan-hooded alter-ego. Through this series, Hancock confronts his artistic forefather and examines their respective motivations for grappling with white supremacism in their art.

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out builds upon the Jewish Museum’s ongoing commitment to exploring contemporary art in real time, providing a platform for each new generation of artists. The Museum also shares a foundational history with Guston’s work including the artist’s solo exhibition in 1966, just before the emergence of his late Klan imagery, and his seminal role in Action/Abstraction: Pollock, de Kooning, and American Art, 1940-1976 on view in 2008. The current exhibition joins a fall program at the Museum that tells complex stories from multiple points of view to spark dialogue around how society engages with and learns from historical narratives. By addressing complex and often painful histories, these stories offer opportunities to create a sense of unity around shared experiences and inspire hopeful paths toward the future.

The exhibition is organized in four thematic sections:

Co-Conspirators

The first section examines Guston’s and Hancock’s first forays into Klan imagery, produced in their young adulthoods. This gallery includes Guston’s Drawing for Conspirators (1930), a troubling image of the aftermath of a lynching that speaks to the toll of white supremacy in the United States. Guston’s mural of another lynching scene (c. 1931), painted for the John Reed Club to commemorate the plight of the Scottsboro Boys, is presented in facsimile form, as the original work was destroyed by the Los Angeles police and the KKK.

Guston’s early, politically motivated works will be presented alongside Hancock’s representations of Loid, a fictitious ghost of a 1950s Black sharecropper who appears as half Klansman, half Klan victim, conceived by the artist around the time of his discovery of Guston’s work in the mid-1990s. This harbinger of vengeance, portrayed with a white sheet and noose and wielding a hammer of justice, first emerged in a photographic self-portrait (Properties of the Hammer, 1994) by Hancock at the age of 19, and has recurred in various iterations in drawings (Judgment #2, 2000), cartoons, and paintings (Coloration Coronation, 2016) to the present day.

K-K Kan I Help You?

This next section features a selection of significant late Klansmen paintings and drawings by Guston, including The Studio (1969) and Riding Around (1969). These works represent Guston’s renewed exploration of the Klan, an exercise in both social satire and self-condemnation, following a resurgence of Klan activity in response to the advancements made by the civil rights movement in the United States.

This section also features Hancock’s Epidemic! Presents: Step and Screw! (2014), the graphic series created by Hancock “as a kind of one-liner: what would happen if my alter-ego Torpedoboy met Philip Guston’s alter-ego, the Klansman?” Step and Screw! marks the first time Hancock dealt explicitly with his and his family’s personal ties to America’s haunted past. In 30 black-and-white panels, Hancock contrasts the dark comedy of his comic strip with a fantastical timeline that blends Guston’s and Hancock’s life stories and delves into their generational traumas.

Conception and Execution

The third section of the exhibition focuses on Hancock’s paintings that grew out of Step and Screw! The majority of these mixed media works, which fuse image and text and recombine elements from the original comic book, focus on the “pregnant” moment of exchange between the Klansman and Torpedoboy. In each new iteration, the characters engage in a dubious handoff, with the hooded figure offering the skeptical superhero an object associated with wisdom, be it a lightbulb, an apple, or a head. Works on view include Step and Screw: The Star of Code Switching (2020) from the Jewish Museum’s collection, in which the Klansman offers a talisman so powerful that Torpedoboy’s racial transformation is instantaneous and Lights Out (2023), in which Torpedoboy ends his tenuous affinity with the Klansman, enacting a symbolic patricide.

The Ladder of Coincidence

The final section of the exhibition serves as a coda to the presentation with a single pair of monumental paintings, Guston’s The Ladder (1978) and Hancock’s The Former and the Ladder or Ascension and a Cinchin' (2012). These works illustrate the “umbilical connection” that Hancock has described feeling toward his predecessor, and how Guston’s influence and imagery have subconsciously found their way into many facets of Hancock’s work.

This exhibition is organized by Rebecca Shaykin, Curator, The Jewish Museum, in partnership with Trenton Doyle Hancock

A lavishly illustrated companion volume, co-published with Yale University Press and designed by the award-winning firm Morcos Key, features a lead essay by curator Rebecca Shaykin, with additional contributions by Trenton Doyle Hancock, the veteran curator and noted Black American art scholar Valerie Cassel Oliver, and the celebrated American Jewish comic artist Art Spiegelman. The texts offer multiple perspectives on the current political moment and the ways in which art, popular comics, personal narrative, and humor can deepen our understanding of Black and Jewish experiences in the United States. The book is available worldwide. 

JEWISH MUSEUM, NEW YORK
1109 5th Avenue at 92nd Street, New York, NY 10128

Related posts: 

Philip Guston. SingularitiesHauser & Wirth Zurich , 7 June – 7 September 2024 

Philip Guston Now, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, March 2 – August 27, 2023 

Philip Guston - Late Paintings, Peder Lund, Oslo , September 20 - November 8, 2014 

Philip Guston: Works on Paper, The Morgan Library & Museum, New York, May 2 - August 31, 2008

Philip Guston: Mind and Matter, McKee Gallery, New York, November 11 - December 23, 2003

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston
Jewish Museum, New York - November 8, 2024 - March 30, 2025

10/11/24

William Gropper: Artist of the People @ The Phillips Collection, Washington DC

William Gropper: Artist of the People 
The Phillips Collection, Washington
October 17, 2024 - January 5, 2025

WILLIAM GROPPER
Self-portrait, 1965
Oil on canvas, 20 x 24 in.
Collection of Craig Gropper, 
Courtesy ACA Gallery, NY

WILLIAM GROPPER
Eternal Senator, 1935
Oil on canvas, 72 x 42 1/8 in.
Collection of Harvey Ross

WILLIAM GROPPER
Construction of the Dam, 1938
Oil on canvas, 27 1/4 x 87 1/4 in.
Smithsonian American Art Museum, 
Transfer from the U.S. Department of the Interior,
National Park Service

WILLIAM GROPPER
“Our present foes are domestic foes, not foreign foes.”, 1942
Ink, crayon, and opaque white paint on paper
15 3/8 x 11 1/4 in.
The Phillips Collection
Gift of Harvey Ross in honor of Elsa Smithgall’s
professionalism and dedicated service to 
The Phillips Collection, 2023
Published in The Illustrious Dunderheads, 1942

WILLIAM GROPPER
Congressional Declaration, 1947
Ink, crayon, and opaque white paint on paper
19 5/8 x 15 5/8 in.
Collection of Harvey and Harvey-Ann Ross
Published in New Masses, July 8, 1947

The Phillips Collection presents William Gropper: Artist of the People, the first exhibition in Washington, DC, dedicated to political cartoonist, painter, and printmaker WILLIAM GROPPER (b. 1897, New York, NY; d. 1977, Manhasset, NY). Featuring more than 40 paintings, cartoons, and caricatures this focused exhibition reveals William Gropper’s biting commentary on human rights, class, labor, freedom, democracy, and the hypocrisy of the American dream. The exhibition spans the artist’s most prolific years and reconstructs his political critiques and commitment to social justice for a contemporary audience. 

The son of impoverished immigrants from Romania and Ukraine, William Gropper grew up poor on the Lower East Side. Witnessing the daily injustices face by the working class during his formative years instilled in him a sympathy for marginalized communities, which greatly influenced his direction as an artist. Gropper contributed thousands of incisive illustrations to Vanity Fair and the New York Tribune, as well as more radical papers like the New Masses, Rebel Worker, and Morning Freiheit. Hailed as the Honoré Daumier of his time due to his sharp criticism of politicians and the government, William Gropper developed a powerful artistic language to catalyze social change.
“Gropper was an artist of, by, and for the people, who fervently believed in the power of art to bring people together and effect change,” says Vradenburg Director & CEO Jonathan P. Binstock. “Over half a century since their creation, Gropper’s work exposes universal human concerns, including the fragility of our democracy, which continue to persist. As an artist who has long been overlooked in the history of 20th-century American art, we are excited to share his work with our guests and spark conversations about its relevance to our contemporary world.”
This presentation of Gropper’s satires and commentary featured examples produced during a fertile period in the artist’s career, between the 1930s and 1950s. During the Great Depression, Gropper, like many of his fellow social realist artists and mentors like Robert Henri and George Bellows, celebrated the importance and inherent dignity of the worker in his art. As a labor activist, Gropper championed unions and defended government programs like the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which provided government jobs for millions of the unemployed and commissioned public artworks by artists who have come to define the American modernist canon including Stuart Davis, Dorothea Lange, Jacob Lawrence, and Jackson Pollock. 
“Gropper was a fierce, lifelong social justice advocate who used art to advocate for a better world. He believed strongly that artists be given a ‘free hand’ to reveal hard truths,” says Phillips Chief Curator and exhibition curator Elsa Smithgall. “In addition to his scathing social and political commentary, Gropper also turned to folk heroes and popular imagery from American contemporary discourse to portray optimistic scenes of his vision for an egalitarian society.” 
William Gropper’s socially conscious work went beyond support for the worker to the condemnation of racism, fascism, antisemitism, and governmental corruption. In 1936, while on assignment for Vanity Fair, Gropper wielded his brush to document proceedings of the US Senate, where he observed firsthand the shortcomings of democracy as a political system. During World War II, William Gropper supported the war effort, creating war bond posters and cartoons condemning domestic and foreign fascists. He produced thousands of cartoons and received numerous commissions for murals throughout the country, including Construction of a Dam in the Department of the Interior building in DC.

In the 1950s, William Gropper found himself in the crosshairs of Senator Joseph McCarthy’s “Red Scare,” becoming the first of only two artists to be blacklisted, with his works banned from State Department traveling shows and many museums and galleries. The results were immediate and devastating, yet this did not diminish his belief in democracy and freedom of expression, nor his critical eye and artistic vigor. Following these dramatic events, William Gropper produced his famed 50-print set titled The Capriccios after Spanish artist Francisco de Goya’s series of the same name, drawing a provocative parallel between the Spanish Inquisition and McCarthyism. He channeled this dark chapter of paranoia and political scapegoating into his art and regained popular reception in the final decades of his life. He continued to produce works that speak to themes of war, prejudice, greed, and exploitation into his late seventies. By the year of his death, he had shown at most major museums across the US.

William Gropper: Artist of the People is the first exhibition presented by The Phillips Collection dedicated to the artist. In addition to works on loan, the exhibition features a selection of William Gropper’s paintings, prints, and drawings from the collection of Harvey and Harvey-Ann Ross, many of which recently entered the museum’s permanent collection and will be exhibited for the first time. 

WILLIAM GROPPER: ARTIST OF THE PEOPLE
EXHIBITION CATALOGUE
Edited by Elsa Smithgall, Chief Curator, The Phillips Collection
The exhibition is accompanied by a richly illustrated scholarly catalogue published by The Phillips Collection. It includes a foreword by Jonathan P. Binstock, Vradenburg Director & CEO of The Phillips Collection, essays by noted scholars Norman Kleeblatt, independent curator and critic, Allan Lichtman, Distinguished Professor of History, American University, and Lauren Strauss, Senior Professorial Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Studies for Jewish Studies, American University, a conversation between Harvey Ross and the exhibition’s curator Phillips Chief Curator Elsa Smithgall, and a translated excerpt of Gropper’s writings that appeared in the Yiddish publication Freiheit. The publication is available at the Museum Shop or online on the shop of The Phillips Collection's website.
THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION, WASHINGTON, DC
1600 21st Street, NW, Washington, DC 20009

25/03/18

Martha H. Kennedy, Drawn to Purpose: American Women Illustrators and Cartoonists, 2018

Drawn to Purpose: American Women Illustrators and Cartoonists
University Press of Mississippi in association with the Library of Congress
March 2018

Martha H. Kennedy
Drawn to Purpose: American Women Illustrators and Cartoonists
Foreword by Carla Hayden
Published by University Press of Mississippi 
in association with the Library of Congress
Book cover courtesy of the Library of Congress

A new book presents a survey of the often-neglected artistic achievements of women in cartooning and illustration, featuring more than 250 color illustrations, comic strips and political cartoons, including original art from the collections of the Library of Congress. In “Drawn to Purpose: American Women Illustrators and Cartoonists,” Martha H. Kennedy, curator of popular and applied graphic art, presents a comprehensive look at the trailblazing artists whose work was long overlooked in the male-dominated field from the late 19th century into the 21st century.

“Drawn to Purpose” was published in March 2018 by University Press of Mississippi in association with the Library of Congress. It is the first overarching survey of these art forms by women in the Library’s collection. The book accompanies the Library’s exhibition “Drawn to Purpose” featuring original works by women cartoonists and illustrators.

“‘Drawn to Purpose’ brings together a remarkable sampling of book illustrations, posters, industrial design, courtroom sketches, comic strips, political cartoons and art for magazines and newspapers produced by women over a 150-year span,” Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden wrote in the forward for the book. “As a kid who read everything, I pored over the illustrations just as much as the accompanying words. Images can make reading more meaningful and more memorable.”

In 1915, portrait painter Cecelia Beaux predicted it would be at least 1,000 years before the term “women in art” would sound as strange as the term “men in art.” Indeed, Martha H. Kennedy’s book tracks the incremental progress and societal pressures that kept all but the most resilient women from advancing in the arts. It’s also a story of women artists who were moved by their creative drive, by commerce or by necessity to create art that fulfills a purpose.

Celebrated artists and works featured in the book and exhibition include New Yorker cartoonist Roz Chast, Lynn Johnston’s comic strip “For Better or For Worse,” innovative artists including Lynda Barry and Hilary Price, those who broke barriers of race or sexual orientation to become voices for underrepresented communities including Barbara Brandon-Croft and Alison Bechdel, and rising stars such as Jillian Tamaki.

The book explores several themes and artistic platforms: 
- The Golden Age of Illustration
- Early Cartoonists
- New Voices and New Narratives in Comics
- Illustrations for Industry 
- Editorial Illustrators
- Magazine Covers 
- Cartoons, and Political Cartoonists and Caricaturists.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SHOP
10 First Street S.E., Washington DC
www.loc.gov/visit/shopping/