If You Don’t Think Jasper Johns Can Still Surprise You, Wait Until You Get to the End of This Review
It’s been striking to me to see how there are two camps of people in the lead up to the big, twin shows of Jasper Johns at the Whitney and the Philadelphia museums. There were people who were really ...
Jasper Johns, Racing Thoughts, 1983. Encaustic and collage on canvas, 48 1/8 × 75 3/8 in. (122.2 × 191.5 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Burroughs Wellcome ...
You can say that the new works by Jasper Johns at Matthew Marks are quintessential “late work”—rarefied, haunted, etc. But then again, Jasper Johns is an artist who has been making “late work” since ...
Jasper Johns, “Untitled” (2015), monotype on Sommerset Velvet Cream paper, 37 3/8 x 29 7/8 inches (© Jasper Johns / Licensed by VAGA, New York, courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery) Editor’s Note: This is ...
Collaborations between writers and artists can be a source of intense creative artistic expression. These partnerships may take a variety of forms with the most traditional on being that of the artist ...
NEW YORK — The fifth floor elevators at the Whitney Museum of American Art whisk open to a kaleidoscope of Jasper Johns. It’s a broad and restless confrontation of the work of one of the country’s ...
A closeup of a slice of “Green Angel,” a colored etching by Jasper Johns from 1991. Photo credit: Courtesy, San Diego Museum of Art The San Diego Museum of Art’s new exhibition, “Jasper Johns: ...
Home is where the art is: The former home of Jasper Johns is poised to receive a price adjustment to reflect demand, we hear. Scott McMenamin / Popperfoto via Getty Images A rustic Stony Point, NY, ...
At 91 years old, Jasper Johns is one of the most important living artists today, with auction sales worth tens of millions of dollars and a seven-decade career credited with changing the course of ...
Jasper Johns in his studio (c. 1976–80) (© 1991 Hans Namuth Estate; photo Hans Namuth, courtesy Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona) In his poem “My Heart Leaps Up” (1802), William ...
Who doesn't love a subway series? Two venues, twice the excitement. And what goes for baseball fans, shuttling between stadiums, also goes for art lovers. "Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror" is an experiment.
Face in hands, the stricken soldier contorts in agony, evidently weeping and plainly oblivious of being observed, alone in an equipment shed. His name and that of the intrusive photojournalist appear ...
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