| Jasper
Johns (American, 1930 - )
Painter, sculptor, and printmaker,
Jasper Johns became one of America's best-known post-Abstract
Expressionists and Minimalists. His name is most associated
with pictorial images of flags and numbers, Pop-Art subjects
that he depicted in Minimalist style with emphasis on linearity,
repetition, and symmetry. Johns completed his first flag painting
in 1955, alphabet subjects in 1956, sculpture in 1958, and lithographs
in 1960.
Unlike Abstract Expressionism, these signature works seem removed
from the artist's emotions. They are modernist in that they
lack traditional perspective, focusing on interrationships of
color and shapes, but are realist in that they have recognizable
subject matter.
Born in Allendale, South Carolina, Johns grew up in that state
with no formal art training but did attend the University of
South Carolina for two years. In 1949, he moved to New York
City but was drafted into the Army. Returning to New York, he
began experimenting with styles, and "Flag", dated
1955, earned him his first major attention. It was revolutionary
in that it was simply a geometric design on a large canvas,
divorced from emotional or political connotation.
His flag paintings are credited as key in the development of
Minimal Art in that the focus of these pieces was their linearity
and uniformity with de-emphasis on the unique creative talents
of the artist. For Johns, major influences on this Minimalist
style were his friendships with dancer Merce Cunningham, composer
John Cage, and artist Robert Rauschenberg.
Over the next few years, Johns used the same approach with
other images that were traditionally symbols. In 1956 to 1957,
he added numbers to his paintings; in 1958, he did his first
sculpture of mundane objects; and in 1960, he executed his first
lithographs.
In 1959, his work became increasingly abstract, influenced
by Surrealism and Dadaism, with surfaces complicated by combining
bold colors with letters and other symbols, some of them obvious
such as maps and others hard to read. He created assemblage,
and from 1972, used a cross-hatching method.
In 1997, a major retrospective of 225 of Johns' work was held
in New York at the Museum of Modern Art, organized by Kirk Varnedoe.
Following this, he began a new series that were much more muted,
mysterious, and serene than his earlier work. The exhibition
of these paintings debuted on September 15, 1999 at the San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art and traveled to the Yale University
Art Gallery in January 2000 and then to the Dallas Museum of
Art.
In the late 1990s, Johns has been working from a restored barn
near Sharon, Connecticut and pursues a hobby of raising bees.
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