Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,558,602 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Split decisions: Jasper Johns in retrospect.


In anticipation of "Jasper Johns Noun 1. Jasper Johns - United States artist and proponent of pop art (born in 1930)
Johns
: A Retrospective
''For the KRS-One album, see A Retrospective (album)
Another European Lou Reed compilation. Track listing
  1. "I Can't Stand It"
  2. "Walk on the Wild Side"
  3. "Satellite of Love"
  4. "Vicious"
  5. "Caroline Says I"
  6. "Sweet Jane" [Live]
," opening next month at New York's Museum of Modern Art, Rosalind E. Krauss Rosalind Krauss (Born Rosalind Epstein on November 30 1941 (1941--) (age 67)) is an American art critic, professor, and theorist who is based at Columbia University.  and Christopher Knight offer divergent views of the artist's career. One question is foremost on both their minds: How will the work Johns has realized since his 1977 retrospective at New York's Whitney Museum of American Art Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York City, founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. It was an outgrowth of the Whitney Studio (1914–18), the Whitney Studio Club (1918–28), and the Whitney Studio Galleries (1928–30).  stack up, in the context of his broader oeuvre?

WHOLE IN TWO ROSALIND E. KRAUSS

I like to repeat an image in another medium to observe the play between the two: the image and the medium.

- Jasper Johns to Christian Geelhaar(1)

I must have read it on an airplane since that's the only occasion I ever have to see Time magazine. I remember my indignation over what I viewed as Robert Hughes' dismissal of Jasper Johns, his complaint that, though Johns had invented some "memorable iconic images," still, "there have not been very many of these." This seemed to have been what he took away from Johns' retrospective in 1977: a repetitiveness that was merely fussy, as "lithography enabled Johns to run scores of variations on his standard themes."(2)

My exasperation in reading this passage had been fed by the wholly different set of my own remembered feelings, ones more akin to gratitude and certainly allied to pleasure, as I moved from painting to painting and from drawing to painting or sculpture to lithography, within the space of the Whitney, watching a poetic world notching piece by piece into place, seeing a universe of feeling slowly exfoliate ex·fo·li·ate  
v. ex·fo·li·at·ed, ex·fo·li·at·ing, ex·fo·li·ates

v.tr.
1. To remove (a layer of bark or skin, for example) in flakes or scales; peel.

2.
 from a restricted supply of imagery continually calling itself to mind. Poetry was indeed the practice that had suggested itself, as I thought of the way images return, reburnished and refocused, at the important junctures of lyric experience, so that whether these are the permutations played on water over rock or the distances between clouds, ranges of emotion are tested against the choice of a limited lexicon within any given poet's work.

Perhaps the image in all of Johns' oeuvre I find most evocative and moving is that of the diver, finally called forth as such only in Diver, 1963, but evoked in much of his work in the years previous. Plunging seven feet through the sooty soot·y  
adj. soot·i·er, soot·i·est
1. Covered with or as if with soot.

2. Blackish or dusky in color.

3. Of or producing soot.
 charcoal medium, the outstretched out·stretch  
tr.v. out·stretched, out·stretch·ing, out·stretch·es
To stretch out; extend.


outstretched
Adjective
 arms and fingers touch bottom at the picture's lower rim before executing the double arc of a breaststroke that delivers each opened palm to the adjacent vertical edge of the work, itself six feet wide. One is reminded of de Kooning talking about measurement in Western art and the body stretched out prone on the squares of Renaissance pavements, or of another Abstract Expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism  
n.
A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences.



ex·pres
 speaking about the dimensions of his painting being determined by the breadth of a man's extended arms. And while hints of this ethos of Action are always somewhere in Johns' art, what separates his work definitively from the proclivity pro·cliv·i·ty  
n. pl. pro·cliv·i·ties
A natural propensity or inclination; predisposition. See Synonyms at predilection.



[Latin pr
 to landscape of the New York School New York school

Painters who participated in the development of contemporary art, particularly Abstract Expressionism, in or around New York City in the 1940s and '50s.
 is the blindness of this dive, the sense of a gesture that is nothing but touch, the body's yield to vertigo, the blackness and obscurity closing over its horizonless fall.

Leo Steinberg had already spoken about this sense of a stripping away of the visual in Johns' work, when he described the 1955 Green Target, for example, as "a target in Braille," and characterized the artist as someone "who believes nothing that he cannot touch."(3) It was this fact, that Johns' surfaces are nothing but tactility, endless evocations of the experience of relief, that separated them in Steinberg's experience from Action painting. "One suddenly saw how Franz Kline bundles with Watteau and Giotto. For they are all artists who use paint and surface to suggest existences other than surface and paint."(4)

In personifying what had presented itself as mechanical in the earlier versions of the "device," with its automation of the smear of paint - executed by the implied rotation of a stirring stick or ruler - the diver's stroke does not merely render explicit the fact that the "device" had referred to the painter's gesture all along, to the hand that guides the brush as it drags wet pigment through wet. It also spells out the fact that, unlike the other senses, touch is touched back; so that in closing in on its prey it touches itself as well. Johns' newly embodied "device" - arm and palm leaving their own print as they smear their semicircle - though executed on this side of the surface, has the uncanny effect of seeming to appear from underneath the surface as well. It is in this ambiguity that it images forth the experience of a body touching itself, pressing itself against itself as in a mirror. And so it had also seemed in the extraordinary "Study for Skin I-IV" set of drawings, 1962, or even in The Critic Sees, 1961.

But nowhere is this effect of the blind reflexiveness of touch made so self-descriptive as in Liar, 1961. A representational version of the liar's paradox, here the "real" is false, since the tampon tampon /tam·pon/ (tam´pon) [Fr.] a pack, pad, or plug made of cotton, sponge, or other material, variously used in surgery to plug the nose, vagina, etc., for the control of hemorrhage or the absorption of secretions.  version of the letters is reversed, and the "true" is unreal, since their correct, printed version is forever locked within the bubble of virtual space: Duchamp's "mirroric return." Yet if this were all the painting were, it would be merely clever and brittle, a bright piece of Conceptual art. What is remarkable is that it is the first manifestation of Johns' adoption of another Duchampian trope trope  
n.
1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor.

2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies.
, the "hinge picture," so that the experience is of our deliverance from the paradox in the imagined folding of the two versions over on one another in the reflexive connection of the imprinting imprinting, acquisition of behavior in many animal species, in which, at a critical period early in life, the animals form strong and lasting attachments. Imprinting is important for normal social development.  itself, when the touching is touched back, and true and false cancel one another in a moment whose condition is its own, necessarily invisible, auto-proximity. Yet the folding over on itself had also been there in Disappearance, 1961, or Shade, 1959, and prefigured, even earlier, in Canvas, 1956. And this decision to make a work out of the folding of matter over on itself, as a way of imaging touch, is already at the heart of Johns' method in the slowly built-up collage and encaustic encaustic, painting medium in which the binder for the pigment is wax or wax and resin. Examples of encaustic tomb portraits from Roman Egypt bear witness to the durability of the medium, which is thought to have been widely used in ancient times.  surface of the very first Flag, 1954-55.

Thus, though Diver might be a freestanding image within Johns' work, emerging in 1962 in the oil painting by that name, as well as in the 1963 drawing, or Periscope periscope (pĕr`ĭskōp) [Gr.,=view around], instrument to enable a person to see objects not in his direct line of vision or concealed by some intervening body. Its essential parts are a tube, prisms, lenses, mirrors, and an eyepiece.  (Hart Crane), 1963, or lithographs such as Hatteras, 1963, it elaborates what had characterized the work all along - a form of comment or explanation - just as it would in turn be elaborated by other "images" such as the hinged letters in Field Painting, 1963-64, and According to What, 1964, and even later through all the references to mirror returns.

One of these references is, of course, the hatching motif that Johns took up in 1972 and ran in the Corpse and Mirror pictures of 1974-75. For hatching is, and has always been within Western art, a transcription for how surfaces feel as they turn away from a source of light into relative obscurity, the appearance of the object submerged in light and shade a stand-in for the experience of touching it. That Johns' dense network of hatching was meant to reconfigure the shallow build-up of encaustic of his earliest surfaces, or the smeared star bursts of oil paint in works from the late '50s, was just as obvious as the fact that the linear bundles of each hatching component served as a proxy for the outstretched hand and fingers of Diver. Johns himself could not have made this connection clearer than in the paired lithograph Savarin, 1977-81, where the coffee can sits in front of Corpse and Mirror over a base in which the diver's imprinted hand and arm appears, and Untitled, 1977, in watercolor on plastic, where the same composition figures the "Corpse and Mirror" background as an interlocked sequence of palm prints.

I've used all those techniques, but what I mean is that once something is established in my mind as an image, I go to great lengths to reproduce it by whatever means.

- Johns to Nan Rosenthal and Ruth Fine(5)

In the interview to which Johns submitted at the time of his massive drawing retrospective at the National Gallery in 1990, he admitted to something he had earlier said to one of his interlocutors. With the seeming perversity per·ver·si·ty  
n. pl. per·ver·si·ties
1. The quality or state of being perverse.

2. An instance of being perverse.

Noun 1.
 that marks so much of his recorded conversation, he maintained that he didn't know how to draw: "I was never well trained as a draftsman. . . . I don't think I ever did it very well."(6)

Coming from one of the great technicians of postwar art, this is a weird remark, until we realize that until the mid '80s all of Johns' graphic mastery had been geared to transcribing experiences of touch, and never what characterizes optical experience, which could be called "seeing-at-a-distance." It is this form of profile, arriving as it does from a space beyond the surface, that makes its entry into his art with the Seasons paintings, even though the form it takes there as cast shadow might seem to be an extension of the diver's imprint. But the tracing of the shadow of the artist's body as it falls from elsewhere onto the surface belongs to vision and not to touch. This is what Pliny the Elder Pliny the Elder (Caius Plinius Secundus) (plĭ`nē), c.A.D. 23–A.D. 79, Roman naturalist, b. Cisalpine Gaul. He was a friend and fellow soldier of Vespasian, and he dedicated his great work to Titus.  had meant, when he makes the act performed by Butades' daughter, as she renders her departing lover's shadow permanent in the form of a traced profile, the birth of drawing and thus of visual art.

And it is with this moment that Johns' whole field of reference changes, as his weaving of allusions to the world of optical experience - to Gestalt Gestalt (gəshtält`) [Ger.,=form], school of psychology that interprets phenomena as organized wholes rather than as aggregates of distinct parts, maintaining that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.  puzzles, to figure/ground reversals - becomes the newfound ballast for his anything-but-tactile surfaces.

In his 1994 book Figuring Jasper Johns, Fred Orton speaks of Johns' connection to Magritte, signaled by Johns' acquisition of Magritte's 1936 The Interpretation of Dreams. Orton relates the presence of Johns' flagstone flagstone: see silt.  image in 1972 to Magritte's depiction of (equally tacky) meuliere stonework stonework, term applied to various types of work—that of the lapidary who shapes, cuts, and polishes gemstones or engraves them for seals and ornaments; of the jeweler or artisan who mounts or encrusts them in gold, silver, or other metal; of the stonemason who , and Johns' use of body fragments to the Surrealist's own. But there is something else the two artists share. Both have a peculiarly awkward relation to the drawn profile. The context for Magritte's is of course the elementary-school primer, a kind of drawing suspended somewhere between the schoolroom model and the hesitancy hes·i·tan·cy
n.
An involuntary delay or inability in starting the urinary stream.
 of the childish copy. Johns', as it appears from the mid '80s on, has no such context to explain it. And in its privileging of the visual over the tactile, it splits Johns' work in two.

This split feels very much like the one operating in the work of Johns' contemporary Cy Twonbly, which also divides into an emphatically tactile "before," and a luminously atmospheric (but less formally and conceptually radical) "after" around 1980; or that of a somewhat younger Frank Stella, whose persistent linking of color to the indexical in·dex·i·cal  
adj.
1. Of or having the function of an index.

2. Linguistics Deictic.

n.
A deictic word or element.

Adj. 1. indexical - of or relating to or serving as an index
 repetition of the pictorial donnees insisted on tactility up to the mid '70s, after which a "baroque" style becomes wildly, and arbitrarily, optical, no matter how sculptural its means. We could also think about a similar split in the work of Giacometti, with his pre-World War II sculpture exploring visceral experience - as "felt" from inside - and going so far as to embody (and phallicize) even the visual trajectory (in Pointe a l'oeil [Point to the eye], 1932), only to do a U-turn after 1945 and to mark the output as visual, underscoring that this means seen-at-a-distance.

The "schizo-artist" as exemplified by these cases, among many, many more, may be a mark of our times, which no longer provide the social conditions for those long, gradualist unfoldings of artistic careers, so organic in their slowly burgeoning development over four or five decades, exemplified by Michelangelo, Titian Titian (tĭsh`ən), c.1490–1576, Venetian painter, whose name was Tiziano Vecellio, b. Pieve di Cadore in the Dolomites. Of the very first rank among the artists of the Renaissance, Titian had an immense influence on succeeding generations , Rembrandt, and Monet. But it is safe to say that museums of Modern art, most particularly in the context of retrospectives of living artists, are not the sites within which to conduct such an analysis. For the riven rive  
v. rived, riv·en also rived, riv·ing, rives

v.tr.
1. To rend or tear apart.

2. To break into pieces, as by a blow; cleave or split asunder.

3.
 career is most generally seen not as an interesting phenomenon, but as a failure, as an inability to live up to the picture of coherent selfhood self·hood  
n.
1. The state of having a distinct identity; individuality.

2. The fully developed self; an achieved personality.

3.
 that the art itself is supposed, reassuringly, to reflect at us, its viewers.

The Museum of Modern Art, however. is in a particularly good position to come to terms with this phenomenon in Johns. The intelligence of both Kirk Varnedoe, the exhibition's curator, and Johns himself, as its subject, may permit the lifting of the veil that has masked the divide in so many other cases. It may permit us to examine the price of this shift in Johns' work, not only formally, but in terms of the difference it makes in what I have highlighted above as Johns' earlier, lyric recapitulations of the paradoxical "image" of touch. And then again, the exhibition may work to paper over this break in the work, producing, yet again, the feeling of the undivided oeuvre, continuous, unruffled, ongoing.

1. Christian Geelhaar, "interview with Jasper Johns," in Jasper Johns: Working Proofs, exhibition catalogue (Basel: Kunstmuseum Basel, 1979), p. 65.

2. Robert Hughes, "Pictures at an Inhibition," Time (October 31, 1977), p. 84.

3. Leo Steinberg, Jasper Johns (New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: George Wittenborn, 1963), p. 27.

4. Ibid., p. 22.

5. Nan Rosenthal and Ruth Fine, "Interview with Jasper Johns," in The Drawings of Jasper Johns, exhibition catalogue (Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art; London: Thames & Hudson, 1990), p. 70.

6. Ibid.

ONE FOR ALL CHRISTOPHER KNIGHT

I don't like not liking Jasper Johns' later paintings. It just seems ungenerous un·gen·er·ous  
adj.
1. Slow or reluctant in giving, forgiving, or sharing; stingy.

2. Harsh in judgment; unkind.

3. Mean-spirited; illiberal; ignoble.
. The paintings from the first 20 years of his career have given me so much pleasure, so much excitement, so much consolation, that feeling a deep connection to his art slowly unravel for the second 20 years is like losing a cherished intimacy. My anxious anticipation for the Museum of Modern Art's retrospective of Johns' work since 1954 is born of a hope that I might get some idea of just what happened - either to the paintings, to me, or to both of us.

Between 1955, when he completed his famous Flag, and 1968, when there began a lengthy hiatus from his regular schedule of exhibitions every two or three years at Leo Castelli Gallery, Johns was an indispensable figure in creating an epochal ep·och·al  
adj.
1. Of or characteristic of an epoch.

2.
a. Highly significant or important; momentous: epochal decisions made by Roosevelt and Churchill.

b.
 shift in art. That change has since been characterized with many salient descriptions, including an evolutionary switch from Modern to post-Modern attitudes and from avant-garde to Pop activity. I also think of it as a deeper alteration in cultural grounding, one that went from a European foundation to a distinctly American one. I don't mean this in the old chauvinist chau·vin·ism  
n.
1. Militant devotion to and glorification of one's country; fanatical patriotism.

2. Prejudiced belief in the superiority of one's own gender, group, or kind: "the chauvinism . . .
 sense of blood-and-soil nationalism. Rather, the Stars-and-Stripes image of Flag also symbolizes a tectonic shift in the narrative of culture, which was on a lot of minds at the time.

Just as emblematically, Clement Greenberg's contentious essay "'American-Type' Painting" also appeared in 1955. The critic sought to consolidate the stature of Abstract Expressionist art at precisely the moment Johns was busily embalming embalming (ĕmbä`mĭng, ĭm–), practice of preserving the body after death by artificial means. The custom was prevalent among many ancient peoples and still survives in many cultures.  its gestural brushstrokes in the cadaverous ca·dav·er·ous
adj.
1. Suggestive of death; corpselike.

2. Having a corpselike pallor.
 translucence of pigmented wax. By then, a first wave of so-called American-Type painting, which valorized personal liberty through an abstraction born of Surrealist journeys into the irrational and the unknown, had long since crashed on history's shores. Susan Landauer, in her recent book and exhibition The San Francisco School of Abstract Expressionism, has convincingly shown that AbEx was a nationwide phenomenon in postwar America, not a local one. From 1946 on, its ethos was as common in artists' studios in Iowa and Oregon as on loth loth  
adj.
Variant of loath.


loth
Adjective

same as loath

Adj. 1. loth
 Street in New York. Rather than erupting in Manhattan and rippling out toward the margins, an AbEx ethos simmered everywhere. Such widespread receptivity to advanced ideas in art had never before characterized American cultural life. Although Abstract Expressionism would eventually be narrowed into a specifically New York School, its early prevalence in the far-flung studios of postwar artists all across America signals that a fundamental change had occurred in the culture.

1955 was also the year that Mattachine Society founder Harry Hay got hauled before the House Un-American Activities Committee House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), a committee (1938–75) of the U.S. House of Representatives, created to investigate disloyalty and subversive organizations. Its first chairman, Martin Dies, set the pattern for its anti-Communist investigations. , in one climactic episode of the homosexual purges at the U.S. State Department, and it was the moment hysterical resistance erupted against the Supreme Court's ruling that public school segregation violated the Constitution's equal protection clause The Equal Protection Clause, part of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, provides that "no state shall… deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. . It shouldn't be surprising that Jasper Johns, a gay kid fresh from segregated small-town South Carolina South Carolina, state of the SE United States. It is bordered by North Carolina (N), the Atlantic Ocean (SE), and Georgia (SW). Facts and Figures


Area, 31,055 sq mi (80,432 sq km). Pop. (2000) 4,012,012, a 15.
, might regard as just a tad vainglorious freshly minted claims of a postwar triumph in unfettered liberty for American-Type painting.

More than two years passed between the dream Johns is said to have had that gave him the idea to paint Flag and the first showing of the famous encaustic collage, in a group exhibition at Castelli at the end of the 1957 season. During that brief span a lot of memorable things happened in rapidly changing postwar life, both large and small, which collectively and in hindsight suggest the swelling tides of a sea change in American culture. Jackson Pollock died in a car crash in suburban Long Island and James Dean died in a car crash in suburban Los Angeles. Allen Ginsberg's doleful dole·ful  
adj.
1. Filled with or expressing grief; mournful. See Synonyms at sad.

2. Causing grief: a doleful loss.
 Howl echoed forth from San Francisco and Ginsberg's pal Jack Kerouac published On the Road. Swiss expatriate Robert Frank hit the road too, to photograph The Americans. In a London still reeling from wartime devastation, the nervously forward-looking exhibition "This Is Tomorrow" saw the future reflected in a shiny new consumer life being created in the old colony across the Atlantic. In Paris Roland Barthes published his Mythologies, inspired by encounters with the new mass culture, and outside Chicago the first franchise outlet opened of a suburban L.A. drive-in called McDonald's. L.A.'s Case Study House program, which had sought to apply a European Modernist esthetic es·thet·ic
adj.
Variant of aesthetic.
 to the mass-produced American housing industry, quietly admitted failure with the construction of Craig Ellwood's deluxe Case Study House #17, the first luxury example in the program's adventurous series of Miesian model homes; it retreated to upscale exclusivity and abandoned the program's original aspirations for elevating the middle-class masses.

European Modernist ideals just didn't fit the emergent powerhouse of American sensibilities, which were democratic, consumerist, and entertainment-oriented. In a shifting context like this, Johns' blunt painting of the Stars and Stripes Stars and Stripes

nickname for the U.S. flag. [Am. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 8567]

See : America
 quickly became an artistic emblem, in addition to its traditional role as a patriotic one. Johns has denied that his early works were a reaction to Abstract Expressionism, but surely his audience saw them that way. The images and objects in his youthful repertoire - flag, target, drawer, canvas back, window shade, number, alphabet, coat hanger, map - had several things in common, as Leo Steinberg made plain as early as 1962. All of them are man-made things, which definitively underlines their subject matter as cultural (rather than natural). Those things are ordinary, they predetermine pre·de·ter·mine  
v. pre·de·ter·mined, pre·de·ter·min·ing, pre·de·ter·mines

v.tr.
1. To determine, decide, or establish in advance:
 the picture's size and shape, they are nonhierarchic. They are flat.

And as the artist famously put it, they are "things the mind already knows." Johns' paintings drained from art any claim of primary value for being the representation of an artist's expressive self. An American flag had no claim on the existential uniqueness of an individual human being. Ditto a target. The drawer wittily implied something personal tucked away inside the painting - socks? underwear? - but this was a drawer that couldn't be opened. The ignominious ig·no·min·i·ous  
adj.
1. Marked by shame or disgrace: "It was an ignominious end ... as a desperate mutiny by a handful of soldiers blossomed into full-scale revolt" Angus Deming.
 backside of a canvas could be painted over just as well as the front. Numbers weren't deployed to add up to any sum, nor the alphabet to make a statement. A shade was pulled down, obscuring views of the void. Anyone could drape drape
v.
To cover, dress, or hang with or as if with cloth in loose folds.

n.
A cloth arranged over a patient's body during an examination or treatment or during surgery, designed to provide a sterile field around the area.
 his cloak on the empty hanger of Johns' art. The map would take you nowhere you hadn't seen before.

The transformation of an artist's private experience into a coherent public language had been a hallmark of 20th-century European painting, from Picasso and Matisse to - well, to Americans like Mark Rothko and Pollock. Suddenly, though, the polarities were reversed. The nature of artistic representation changed. Images had always been described as being surrogates or stand-ins for something absent. But Flag was cobbled cob·ble 1  
n.
1. A cobblestone.

2. Geology A rock fragment between 64 and 256 millimeters in diameter, especially one that has been naturally rounded.

3. cobbles See cob coal.

tr.
 together from encaustic collage on three wooden panels that emphasized the painting's own materiality as an object; even the white stars were cutouts stuck on the picture. It showed that an image doesn't just represent a thing that isn't at hand; it is something in its own right, too. Flag, as is often acknowledged, is both a painting and an actual flag.

And yet, that's not all it is - not by a long shot. The painting also makes a crucial proposition. Flag, like every other flag, is also representational because it represents a constituency. As a flag and as a work of art, it stands in for a body of citizens, men and women who have voluntarily chosen to pledge allegiance and are entitled to elect their representatives. When Johns drained the artist's expressive self from the core of his pictures, he created a vacuum that showed how works of art attain notice, stature, and even meaning: they represent the interests of like-minded individuals, drawn from among a differentiated public that constitutes the audience. The authority of social experience, materialized through an artistic language of idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 private pleasure, is what characterized Johns' surprising work, not the other way around. His flag waved for you; would you salute?

Johns' early paintings signal the moment when art's long-established European and aristocratic cultural model finally began to give way, in favor of one that could be persuasively described as distinctly American. In Los Angeles the signal was received and processed without skipping a beat. L.A. professed no entrenched en·trench   also in·trench
v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es

v.tr.
1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending.

2.
 European cultural matrix but did claim a consolidated cultural industry of Hollywood entertainment. The configuration contradicted traditional conceptions of the centrality of artistic self-expression. Whether for L.A.-based artists who grew to considerable local stature in the '60s, such as Billy Al Bengston Billy Al Bengston (born 1934) in Dodge City, Kansas is an American artist and sculptor who lives and works in Venice, California.

He was educated at Los Angeles City College Los Angeles, CA (1952), California College of Arts & Crafts Oakland, CA (1955), and the Otis Art
, or of major international consequence for the past 30 years, such as Edward Ruscha, the impact of Johns' work - the unabashed sense of wide-open permission it offered - was immediate.

Bengston had been a motorcycle racer of dare-devil demeanor, happily cultivating bodily risk that was rather different from the one metaphorically demanded in the gestural canvases of '50s American painters. On an extended 1958 tour of Europe he saw Johns' paintings in Venice; soon after he stopped making gestural abtractions and began to focus on creating centralized emblems. The first was Grace, a graphite-colored canvas thinly painted with short, cross-hatched markings of the brush, and featuring a more thickly painted, centralized square surrounding a hear. The picture is a frank valentine, in which a Pop emblem commonly denoting emotional love replaces the artfully coded emblem of Abstract expressive brushwork brush·work  
n.
1. Work done with a brush.

2. The manner in which a painter applies paint with a brush.


brushwork
Noun
. Then came pictures centered on an emblematic set of sergeant stripes. Militarily speaking, it's the sergeant who enforces the commands of those in authority. In these resplendent re·splen·dent  
adj.
Splendid or dazzling in appearance; brilliant.



[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin resplend
 paintings Bengston introduced the spray guns and glossy lacquer lacquer, solution of film-forming materials, natural or synthetic, usually applied as an ornamental or protective coating. Quick-drying synthetic lacquers are used to coat automobiles, furniture, textiles, paper, and metalware.  paints regularly used by civilian artists over at the motorcycle body shop. Such pictures at once refused and reversed a European and Expressionist valorization val·or·ize  
tr.v. val·or·ized, val·or·iz·ing, val·or·iz·es
1. To establish and maintain the price of (a commodity) by governmental action.

2.
 of privileged private experience.

This glamorous theatricalization of pleasurable yearning also drove Ruscha's art. The Californian had moved from the Midwest to L.A., wanting to become a commercial artist. In 1957, he was enrolled at the training school for Disney animators, Chouinard Art Institute The Chouinard Art Institute was a professional art school founded in 1921 in Los Angeles, California by Nelbert Murphy Chouinard (1879-1969).

Born in Montevideo, Minnesota, Chouinard studied at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York and in Munich, Germany.
 (now CalArts), when he encountered Johns' work in a magazine reproduction. He too stopped making pale pastiches of AbEx paintings, later crediting the flags and targets as having convinced him to become an artist. The relationships are obvious between Johns' stenciled letters, numbers, and words, and Ruscha's sometimes impastoed paintings of emblematic vocal utterances of California cool, such as 1961's Ace and Boss. More important, though, Ruscha's art was soon marked by what I think of as a "Holiday Inn rootlessness," in which existence is simultaneously experienced as being somewhere in particular and nowhere in general. Many of his unprecedented photobooks - Every Building on the Sunset Strip, Thirtyfour Parking Lots in Los Angeles, Royal Road Test - evoke the transient banality of life on wheels. Twentysix Gasoline Stations, 1963, like a bastard offspring of Kerouac's On the Road and Frank's The Americans, traces a state-by-state automotive journey from L.A. back to Oklahoma, whence the artist came, creating a hugely comic riff on the idea of autobiographical revelation. In the book's last photograph, which takes a sudden detour to a Fina gas station not in Oklahoma but in Texas, Ruscha makes shrewd fun of the pointed tensions between old and new conceptions of art - Fina providing a cinematic, European art-house emblem denoting "The End," and Texas offering a plainspoken plain·spo·ken  
adj.
Frank; straightforward; blunt.



plainspo
, all-American reassertion that, no, you can't go home again You Can’t Go Home Again

revisiting his home town, a writer is disillusioned by what he sees. [Am. Lit.: Thomas Wolfe You Can’t Go Home Again]

See : Homecoming
. So much for the reverential rev·er·en·tial  
adj.
1. Expressing reverence; reverent.

2. Inspiring reverence.



rev
 AbEx journey in search of existential origins.

Geographically and psychologically, Twentysix Gasoline Stations is a map, which followed hot on the heels of Johns' own great maps of the United States from the early '60s, where the names of states or colors migrate aimlessly aim·less  
adj.
Devoid of direction or purpose.



aimless·ly adv.

aim
 across the surface amid signlike bursts of gestural encaustic or oil. In the early '70s these utterly impersonal guides to the lay of the land got redrawn in terms of total abstraction in Johns' puzzlelike crosshatch A criss-crossed pattern used to fill in sections of a drawing to distinguish them from each other.  paintings, which map only the surface parameters of the canvas. Like exploded, linear color patches in a painting by Cezanne, the primaries, secondaries, and black and white patterns of Scent, Corpse and Mirror, The Dutch Wives, and so on create sensuous, internal visual rhymes, often of great complexity. The left edge of one multipanel crosshatch painting even mirrors the right edge at the other end, conceptually enclosing the picture's circularity. "In my beginning is my end," as the critic Thomas B. Hess, quoting T. S. Eliot, wrote of these paintings.

It's a short step from there to Johns' work of the '80s and beyond, in which a different circle is closed - though for me, it's always looked like a short step off a tall cliff. Johns' newer paintings are like bulletin boards, on which assorted items of distinctly personal interest have been pinned. The memorabilia include prints and doodles Doodles can mean the following:
  • A doodle is an informal scribble or sketch.
  • Doodles is the former mascot of Chick-fil-A, replaced by the Eat Mor Chikin campaign in 1997.
  • Doodles Weaver was an American comedy actor.
 tacked to the studio wall, fragments of faces and looming self-portrait shadows familiar from Picasso's art, the eccentric shapes of George Ohr ceramics (which Johns fatuously fat·u·ous  
adj.
1. Vacuously, smugly, and unconsciously foolish. See Synonyms at foolish.

2. Delusive; unreal: fatuous hopes.
 collects), a favorite passage of the great Isenheim altarpiece, the old-fashioned water faucet on Johns' bathtub, and reminiscences of his flag. A recurrent image shows a pretty young Gibson girl turning away her face while, when looked at from another mental angle, she metamorphoses This article is about the poem. For other uses, see Metamorphoses (disambiguation).

The Metamorphoses by the Roman poet Ovid is a narrative poem in fifteen books that describes the creation and history of the world, drawing from Greek and Roman mythological
 into a crone crone

see crock.
 shrouded in a babushka. In the girl's beginning is her end.

The same apparently can be said for Johns. Ironically, after waning interest in his art by the end of the '70s, pin-up pictures like Racing Thoughts or The Four Seasons panels were being critically celebrated by the mid '80s, but for reasons that jeopardized the revolution he'd done so much to foster. Johns, it was claimed, was finally lifting the cryptic veil that had shielded his autobiography for so many years: his expressive self, so long repressed re·pressed
adj.
Being subjected to or characterized by repression.
, was making a triumphant appearance at center stage. It's as if the artist, squarely in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of the '80s neo-Expressionist boomlet, had followed the example of Nixon in China: dispensation DISPENSATION. A relaxation of law for the benefit or advantage of an individual. In the United States, no power exists, except in the legislature, to dispense with law, and then it is not so much a dispensation as a change of the law.  was granted for his supposed turn toward an aristocratic privileging of private experience, against which he had battled for so long.

But I can't help asking whether a return to the artistic situation from which Johns liberated himself (and us) 40 years ago is really all that's going on in his later paintings. Do they in fact announce the revivalist, even reactionary tendencies that have seemed to be their disappointing impetus? The champions of this view commonly assert that the only other option is to regard his work in strictly formalist and commodified ways; but in this respect, at least, they are flatly wrong. For just as Johns' Flag was also a radical representation of social experience spoken in art's language of idiosyncratic private pleasure, the recent studio-bound compendiums of personal tastes and private entertainments might well be regarded in much the same way, rather than as an old-fashioned celebration of privileged subjectivity. After all, Johns today is something other than the private enigma he was in 1954. At this advanced stage in his critically significant, wildly influential career, he's an elder statesman. As an artist central to the culture he's now as emblematic as the American flag - something the mind already knows. The radical outlook on the distinctiveness of American life he first proposed is today as ubiquitous as the air we breathe. The uneasy question before us as the MoMA retrospective goes up is whether Johns got lost along the way in the later work, or whether, like Ruscha, he headed for Oklahoma but ended up in Texas.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:painter
Author:Knight, Christopher
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Sep 1, 1996
Words:4807
Previous Article:Public image limited. (public art)
Next Article:Closely watched train. (filmmaker Christopher Munch)
Topics:



Related Articles
Figuring Jasper Johns.
Jasper Johns, 'Alley Oop,' 1958. (painting)
Kelly's coup. (painter Ellsworth Kelly)(Kelly Read)
Ghosts of chance. (painter Ellsworth Kelly)(Kelly Read)
Kelly's green. (painter Ellsworth Kelly)(Kelly Read)
Jasper Johns: Privileged Information.(BookForum)
Art and soul. (artist Lari Pittman)(includes review of career retrospectives of gay artists in 1996)(The Year in the Arts 1996)
Martin Wong. (exhibit at New Museum of Contemporary Art/P.P.O.W)
Poetry in motion: CD-ROM.
MILTOS MANETAS.(Brief Article)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles