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features

Eye Exam
Seeing Gray

Garin Pirnia

In an episode of "The Simpsons," artist Jasper Johns is lionized when Homer accidentally becomes an artist. "In your face, Jasper Johns!" shouts Homer upon selling his first artwork. You know you’re somebody when you’re parodied in pop culture, especially when you’re a Pop artist. Like his contemporaries Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg, Johns made a career out of re-animating both common and iconic objects such as flags, targets and numbers. Johns has slightly been misconstrued, though. Much of his art has been labeled Pop Art, though it has always been imbued with both conceptual and expressionistic qualities alike.

The new Art Institute exhibit specifies the profundity of the color gray, which traverses through Johns’ entire career from the 1950s to the present. Johns once said, "I used gray encaustic [wax medium] to avoid the color situation." Is this statement a cop-out? Is it truly easier to use monochrome instead of delving into a color scheme of bright oranges, reds and yellows? It’s as phony as a film student making a black-and-white film to avoid paying more for color film. But life is mainly gray, not simply black and white. We’d like things to be as clear and simple as black and white, yet life is usually opaque.

Gray began appearing frequently in Johns’ art starting in 1959. "False Start" is a colorful painting with the names of the colors stenciled onto the canvas, and the same year Johns painted "Jubilee," a gray reproduction of the vibrant "False Start." What Johns does with the color gray is change the way one looks at art. He evacuated the gestural strokes of color of their life, replaced it with various shades of gray, and forced viewers to question the difference.

Johns performed this same trick dozens of times throughout his career, and the exhibit does a good job of breaking down his artistic ventures into sizable thematic chunks. First, American flags are explored. Johns’ encaustic painting "Flag" from the mid-1950s integrates signature reds, whites, blues and stars, but in the 1960s, he grayed the flag using graphite wash, a silvery-gray medium. In monochromatic gray, the iconic flag image isn’t as ostensible. Johns liked to manipulate his objects by taking the same picture and reproducing it in several forms and mediums. Encaustic was his main medium, but he used graphite, lithography, conté crayon, sculp-metal, tusche and various ilks of paper including tan wove paper, ivory wove, Japanese and newsprint to great effect, each revealing unique subtleties. Even his grays vary from the lightest in the spectrum to almost black.

In a way, Johns keeps beating a dead horse. The same images keep resurfacing later in his career. "Two Flags" shows up again in 1985 when he used ink on plastic, emanating a watercolor effect, and again in 1994 in "Flag," when he grayed over the colored flag masking and suppressed the rich colors but let some color remnants seep through. Next was Johns’ series of targets. Remarkably, the targets look more akin to eyeballs, and thus the true subject matter of Johns’ work becomes apparent. "White Target" is composed of a succession of white concentric circles on black paper, tricking the mind into believing that it’s gray. The color gray, paired with the target form, comes to be representative of the viewers’ eye and the intricacies of seeing.

Later in his career, Johns obtained a palpable mood with his grays when he eschewed structure and allowed himself to succumb to emotion. In the early 1960s, Johns started spending more time in South Carolina and less time in New York. In "Periscope (Hart Crane)," Johns depicted the suicidal poet Hart Crane with grays suggesting melancholy and distance. "Water Freeze" consists of two gray panels and a red thermometer resting in between them making the viewer aware of the context. "Diver," his largest work on paper in the exhibit, is a blend of charcoal, pastel and watercolor on tan paper transforming into bleakness.

With more than a hundred pieces encompassing more than fifty years of Johns’ oeuvre, it’s impossible to easily summarize or generalize, but the breadth and variety of this seemingly simple color leaves the door wide open for interpretation. In fact, it’s those gray areas that fascinate and challenge us the most.

Jasper Johns’ "Gray" shows at the Art Institute of Chicago, Michigan and Adams, (312)443-3600, through January 6.

(2007-11-06)




Also by Garin Pirnia

Profile of the Gallerists
Originally named newspace Chicago, curators Patricia Courson and Rachel Adams opened their habitated apartment gallery in April of 2006. Situated in a non-descript building next to the Chopin Theater, the gallery isn’t obvious—even with its new name, Lloyd Dobler Gallery—but with exciting shows like the current and successful "Spaces into Places" and upcoming shows of thirty artists designing a 1"x1" button that will be displayed in the gallery and a video screening, "Really Rad Videos Part Deux," Chicagoans need to take notice. I caught up with Courson to talk about the gallery’s evolution
(2007-10-09)

Portrait of the Artist
Jamisen Ogg derives his art from archetypal architecture--such as houses with swimming pools redolent of David Hockney and famous architect Richard Neutra--but adds severe contrasting elements to the works. Now residing in New York, Ogg is no stranger to the Chicago art scene as he graduated from the School of the Art Institute and has shown his work in past shows around town
(2007-05-22)

Tip of the Week
L.A. artist Jon Rajkovich's second show at Lisa Boyle differentiates from his previous show there with a focus on more abstracted sculptures and a departure of the surreal
(2007-05-01)

Portrait of the Artist
American photographer Mark Powell doesn't just document street life, he gets inside his subjects, delving deep into what makes them tick
(2007-04-17)

Portrait of the Gallerist
(2007-03-27)

Profile of the Artists
(2007-02-06)

Art Break
(2006-09-19)

Tip of the Week
(2006-09-19)

Tip of the Week
(2006-09-05)






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