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Jasper Johns : New Paintings and Works on Paper

Jasper Johns : New Paintings and Works on Paper
by Gary Garrels, Richard S. Field, Joachim Pissarro

Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns (Universe of Art)

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Jasper JohnsJasper Johns by Michael Crichton

This little book has an essay at the front by Leo Castelli, the legendary New York art dealer who in the late 1950s snapped up the young Jasper Johns for his stable of new artists--nearly all of whom became wildly successful. Most of the rest of the book is like a snapshot album, immersing the reader in pictures of Johns, his studio, his paintings, and historical artifacts. These last include the Art News magazine cover of 1958 that put Johns on the map. Speaking of maps, there are reproductions of Johns's famous U.S. maps, and also of his targets and the late double shadow, crosshatch paintings. In the back of the book, there is a brief chronology, plus captions explaining the preceding plates. It's a surprisingly good idea to place them at the end--nicely non-intrusive.

Read Castelli's essay to get a sense of the renowned and perspicacious Leo Castelli, rather than for what it tells you about Johns. For that, there are hundreds of other sources. One startlingly thoughtful analysis of Johns's work appears in James Fenton's book Leonardo's Nephew. Castelli reveals that MoMA's Tom Hess had "a friend" buy one of Johns's early American flag paintings for the museum in order to bypass a conservative acquisitions committee. Fenton tells us it was the architect Philip Johnson, and that it then took 15 years for MoMA to wrest it from Johnson's appreciative grasp. --Peggy Moorman

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Jasper Johns : Writings, Sketchbook Notes, InterviewsJasper Johns : Writings, Sketchbook Notes, Interviews by Jasper Johns, Christel Hollevoet (Editor), Kirk Varnedoe (Editor)

Published in conjunction with the 1996-97 retrospective exhibition of Jasper Johns's work at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, this book is the very first to place this prolific artist in the context of his own words and private writings. This unprecedented collection of notes from Johns's private sketchbooks, published writings, interviews, and conversations with critics, friends, and other writers--many never before published in English--is an indispensable reference work for anyone interested in learning more about this profound American artist. Also included are 51 rare black-and-white photographs of the artist at work.

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MoMA Exhibitions Jasper Johns:  A Retrospective

October 20, 1996 – January 21, 1997 The life's work of an artist who has had a profound influence on American art was featured in this, the first full retrospective of Jasper Johns's work.

 

Jasper Johns:  Works Viewable on the Internet

This site includes links to gallery sites that host works by Jasper Johns, as well as articles and reviews of various pieces, exhibitions and retrospectives.

 

The Art of Code

By Jonathan Katz

Excerpt:

Almost from the very beginning of their relationship, Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg were linked together, usually by people who had little or no idea of what they really meant to each other. Early critics tagged them both with the same facile labels--neo-Dada, assemblage, junk art--and viewed and reviewed them as a pair. They showed together, were discussed together, even discovered together by their dealer. Still later, they would be declared Pop, or more subtly, proto-Pop, and credited with the development of the first American style that led away from Abstract Expressionism. Artistic movements generally involve more than two artists: theirs was confined to them alone.

All the more remarkable then that the work of Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg is so completely distinct; one could simply never mistake one artist's hand for the other's. It seems that the fact that Johns and Rauschenberg were involved together determined to some extent how they were understood. And yet, paradoxically, while their partnership was widely acknowledged, few comprehended what it really meant, and fewer still knew that it transcended simple friendship. John and Rauschenberg are in the curious position of being understood as a pair, but not a couple. Yet they were a couple; and the rather obvious silences, ellipses, and omissions that permeate the usual accounts of their history make no sense unless arrayed against an insistent and damaging homophobia that has led both artists to actually deny the substance of what they had together...

 

Postmodernism and the Art of Identity

By Christopher Reed
From Nikos Strangos (ed.), Concepts of Modern Art - From Fauvism to Portmodernism (World of Art), 1994, Thames and Hudson, pp. 271-93.

Excerpt:

Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, David Hockney or Gilbert and George are cited, their sexual identity is ignored as irrelevant to their artistic production. While the conventions of modernism (still championed by many) ruled such concerns 'ideological', and hence outside the realm of art and aesthetics, parallel expressions of heterosexual masculinity - like the Futurists' machismo and 'contempt for women', Pollock's aesthetic of 'physical violence', or Rothko and Newman's determination to be 'human' by producing 'man-sized' paintings - were perceived as easily compatible with artistic achievement.

If the biases of earlier writings now seem obvious, it is because of the feminist and gay movements, which, beginning around 1970, challenged conventional assumptions about sexuality and gender. Although these movements did not originate in the art world, from their inception artists and critics were involved. Explicitly feminist and gay perspectives began to affect the arts, therefore, at precisely the same moment as the rise of postmodernism. Looking at the definition of postmodernism advanced in the introduction to this essay, it is easy to see how these artistic and social movements might connect. From the outset, postmodernism dislodged the wedge that mainstream modernism had driven between art and life. Frankly engaging in social issues, postmodernists, like feminist and gay activists, deal with ideology, the mass media and the dynamics of authority...

  

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