Jack Whitten: Erasures

Similar documents
Drawing II Course Descriptions Spring 2011

Date: October 17, Graduating Class Sculpture Development Permit. Title of Sculpture: When Women Rise

Thirty-Minute Essay Questions from Earlier AP Exams

Virginia Jaramillo. Point Omega. Dallas Art Fair. April 12-15, 2018

Content Skills Assessments Lessons

Third Grade. Fourth Grade

2011 Austin Independent School District Page 1 of 4 updated 5/15/11

Alexander Calder s Style In uences Chinese Contemporary Artists

Forms of social interaction, methodologies and media. Selection guided by topic

Classroom Ideas (Instructional Strategies) What is texture? or object in art. demonstrate

TABLE OF CONTENTS. foreword. essays. works. artist bios. sally gil: excavating the present_by julie h. reiss

ART DEPARTMENT SEQUENCE. Course Title Length Meeting Time Grades. Clay and Sculpture Semester Daily Studio Art Semester Daily 11-12

Chelmsford Public Schools Fine and Performing Arts Department

BRIEFING FOR PARENTS OF PRIMARY 2 STUDENTS

Installation view, West Gallery. Courtesy of Angell Gallery

2017 SUMMER CAMP PLAN

Art at Cox Green Curriculum Plan. Key Stage 4 Year 9 Term I Term 2 Term 3 Term 4 Term 5 Term 6

ART. Art I 1/2 credit

Third Grade Visual Arts Curriculum Overview

Standards Content Skills Assessments

ART DEPARTMENT POSSIBLE ART SEQUENCES. Ceramics/Sculpture. Photography. Digital. Commercial Art* Digital 2* Studio

Summit Public Schools--Summit, New Jersey. Grade 8 Art Cycle. Length of Course: 45 Days. Curriculum

The student performing at the mastery level identifies selected media, techniques, technologies, and. processes to create twodimensional

KNES Art & Design Course Outline. Year 7

IB Visual Arts Summer Assignment:

Grade 8 CURRICULUM MAP CONTENT: Art Revised: March A5 25A6 25A7 25B7 25B9 25B10 26A6 26A7 26A9 26B7 26B8 26B11 26B12 27B5 27B6 27B7

GALLERY INFORMATION Jordan, Amman - 92 Al-Sweis St. Abdoun For further information, please don t hesitate to contact us:

(A) consider concepts and ideas from direct observation, original sources, experiences, and imagination for original artwork;

FINE ARTS. 9 th -12 th Grade New Media Design 1 Semester ½ Credit Requirements and Limitations: 2-D Design.

Artist photo: Roshanak

Expressive Arts Curriculum Map

VCE Studio Arts Study Design. Implementation briefing July August 2016

Example Items. Studio Art I

FA: Fine Arts. FA 030 FINE ARTS TRANSFER 1.5 credits. FA 040 FINE ARTS TRANSFER 1.5 credits. FA 050 FINE ARTS TRANSFER CREDIT 3 credits

Engages in the creative process to generate and visualize ideas.

2) In which century did drawing come into it's own as an art form? 4) This medium is used to violate the integrity of the painted surface.

Art Radar: Beetween painting and sculpture: Zhu Jinshi at Inside-Out Art Museum, bytianmo Zhang, 15th January 2016

Curriculum Plan 2014/15. Subject: Art and Design. Year 7 8

WheatonArts Home School Classes

Subject Area. Content Area: Visual Art. Course Primary Resource: A variety of Internet and print resources Grade Level: 3

Art and Design Long term plan : scheme 2016/17

The Second Generation Abstract Expressionist, Ed Clark

Based on Davis The Visual Experience ART I MRS. LANCASTER

Woman Sitting, Willem de Kooning, (oil & charcoal on board) [Course notes].

Fine Arts Student Learning Outcomes Course, Program and Core Competency Alignment

Art Department Courses

David Ward: Slow Time Previously unexhibited works since 1968

VA7MC.1 Identifies and works to solve problems through creative thinking, planning, and/or experimenting with art methods and materials.

GAGOSIAN. Hans Ulrich Obrist. Katharina Grosse, Sarah Sze, and Hans Ulrich Obrist. Photo by: Julien Gremaud

Painting, Drawing & Sculpture (PDS)

Jim Dine Everyday. Pop Art Lessons for Elementary School

YEAR 7 & 8 THE ARTS. The Visual Arts

WILLEM DE KOONING THE FIGURE: MOVEMENT AND GESTURE Paintings, Sculptures, and Drawings

Discuss visual metaphors and creative thinking of artists.

Josh Smith CURRENTS FEB 14 - MAR 14, * Images * Press Release

Community Study: City Mural By Gr. 1&2

RED GROOMS: Lesson Plan TRAVELING CORRESPONDENT ON VIEW OCTOBER 15, 2016 JANUARY 8, 2017 ORGANIZED BY THE MEMPHIS BROOKS MUSEUM OF ART

ART DEPARTMENT HIGH SCHOOL VISUAL ART PATHWAYS 3-D STUDIO (CERAMICS/SCULPTURE) 1 Studio 1 Ceramics/Sculpture 1 Digital 1 Photography 1

CHARLES KOEGEL C O L O R M A P S

Visual Arts Audition Packet

School In The Park Curriculum

Painting, Drawing & Sculpture (PDS)

Achievement Targets & Achievement Indicators. Compile personally relevant information to generate ideas for artmaking.

Archdeacon Cambridge Art and Design content and skills

Art Glossary Studio Art Course

Art Whole School Unit Overview and Key Skills Checklist. Essential Learning Objectives:

CHINESE ABSTRACTION SHEN CHEN PAUL CHING-BOR LIANGHONG FENG. March 24 - May 5, MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA

Vocabulary Glossary Visual Arts K-4

What is the difference in a work of art that is called two-dimensional and a work that is called threedimensional?

Victor Pasmore: Towards a New Reality

JAZMIN QUILL MIXED MEDIA ARTIST HE Q UILL G ALLERY. COM ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST PROFILE STATEMENT BIO

Greenwich Visual Arts Objectives The History of Art (Shapers) High School

Visual Arts Grades K /13

CARLOS ROLÓN / DZINE: NOW AND THEN FEB 13 MAY 31, 2015

Art, Middle School 1, Adopted 2013.

DAWOOD PUBLIC SCHOOL COURSE OUTLINE

First Steps. FIS Visual Arts. Specific Learner Expectations Reflection and Appreciation. Visual Art in Society

Richard Pousette-Dart: Beginnings. Biography

Drawing Portfolio. Advanced Placement Studio Art. Drawing embodies a genuine and independent way of thinking. Phillip Rawson

ART S105 Beginning Drawing ART S113 Painting Workshop ART S116 Fiber Arts Spinning ART S138 Natural Dye

found guy du toit and pat mautloa

5a Cork Street, Mayfair, London W1S 3NY

Reading. 1 Read the text quickly. Then answer the questions. / 0.4 point. a. What is The Thinker? b. Who is Rodin?

TExES Art EC 12 Curriculum Crosswalk

Course Overview Course Length Materials Prerequisites Course Outline

Richard Diebenkorn 'The Green Huntsman,' x 69.5", oil on canvas, 1952

SOURCE. bysunday CPS ANTHROPOLOGY. The MUSEUM of EXPLORE

MIDDLE SCHOOL COURSE OUTLINE

Michaël Borremans. Trickland. February 13 March 8, Where is Ned? 2002 Oil on Wood 8.74 x 7.95 inches 22.2 x 20.

Art One. Any Level 2 Course. Any Level 3 Course. Any Level 4 Course Or AP Course

Illuminating Geometry Works List. 6th - 30th April 2017 Gallery 286, 286 Earls Court Rd, Kensington, London SW5 9AS

Visual Arts Curriculum Standards Early Elementary: Grades K-2. State Goal 25 Know the language of the arts.

Achievement Targets & Achievement Indicators. Envision, propose and decide on ideas for artmaking.

KNES Art & Design Course Outline. Year 9

Shrewsbury Borough School Visual and Performing Arts Curriculum 2012 Visual Arts Grade 4

STUDIO ARTS. Certificate of Achievement. Monterey Peninsula College Catalog

Pollock/Motherwell Exhibition Opens at Nelson-Atkins July 8

Central Valley School District Art 5 th Grade August September Standards September Standards

Institute of Arts and Multimedia at Los Angeles Mission College Art 103, Section 3030, Art Appreciation, 3 Units

Three Three Three Solo exhibition KORE Contemporary, Bern (CH) 7 June 12 July 2018

Transcription:

Jack Whitten: Erasures 13

14

Jack Whitten: Erasures Dec. 18, 2012 - March 31, 2013 Jack Whitten, Untitled Study #2, pastel and powdered pigment on paper, 1972. Courtesy of the artist and Alexander Gray Associates, New York. After studying Jack Whitten s work, students will explore his technique of processing paint, using combs or other alternative painting tools. National Standards NA-VA.5-8.1 Understanding and applying media, techniques and processes. NA-VA.5-8.2 Using knowledge of structures and functions. NA-VA.5-8.5 Reflecting upon and assessing the characteristics and merits of their work and the work of others. Georgia Standards VA7MC.1 Identifies and works to solve problems through creative thinking, planning, and/or experimenting with art methods and materials. VA7MC.4 Participates in dialogue about his or her artwork and the artwork of others. 15

16

Artist s Background: New York-based artist Jack Whitten s (b. 1939) earliest experiments with painting date back to the 1960s, a period during which he created dynamic works inspired by abstract expressionism. Noted for their raucous colors and density of gesture combined with topical content, these artworks manifest emotionally complex meditations on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the civil rights movement and the Vietnam War. Experimentation turned to abstraction for Whitten in the 1970s; a new method of painting developed, one that resonates more closely with photography. Gesture is removed from the making of the work; the paint and canvas are processed, produced from large troughs of paint, which are dragged across the canvas with tools including squeegees, rakes and Afro combs. This process yields palpable surface texture, line and void. Paint became a metaphor for skin during the 1980s when Whitten experimented with casting acrylic paints and compounds to create new surfaces and textures. In contrast to the narrative-based and didactic work made by many black artists during this period, Whitten s works reintroduce gesture with aspects of sculpture and collage. In the 1990s, Whitten s experiments with paint as a medium progressed further toward sculpture, as he transformed paint compounds into tiles and applied them to the canvas as mosaics. These works allude to ancient architecture and murals, serving as both an homage to and memorial of celebrated public figures and intimate friends. Whitten s work has been exhibited in the 1969 and 1972 Whitney Annuals (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York); the landmark 1971 exhibition Contemporary Black Artists in America at the Whitney Museum; Energy/ Experimentation: Black Artists and Abstraction 1964 1980 at the Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, 2006; High Times Hard Times: New York Painting 1967-1975, organized by Independent Curators International, 2006; and Art 41 Basel, 2010. Whitten s 1960s paintings and memorial works have been celebrated in solo exhibitions at MoMA PS1, New York, New York, 2007; and the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, Georgia, 2008. Biography from Alexander Gray Associates 17

Terminology/Definitions: ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Non-representational art, or art that is not intended to depict a reality of the visible world. Abstract expressionism became dominant in Western art in the 1950s as a revolutionary break from traditional painting, prioritizing the physicality of paint and freedom of expression. GESTURE Motion of the limbs or body to express thought. In painting, gesture indicates the quality of the artist s movement to apply paint to the canvas. Mechanical processes, such as printmaking, remove gesture from the work. NEGATIVE SPACE The space between and around objects. Successful compositions balance positive and negative space. GHOSTING In printing, images that appear multiple times on a page with diminishing density. SCALE The proportion or ratio that defines size relationships. 18

Discussion Questions Looking at Jack Whitten s work, can you see indications of a brushstroke? What visual indicators demonstrate how Whitten dragged the paint across the canvas with a rake or other tool? How would you describe the texture he creates? How is a rake similar to a paintbrush? How is it different? In 1974, Jack Whitten took an artist s residency at Xerox, where he explored printing techniques of applying and setting toner. Toner is the powder used in printers to form text and images on paper. The toner is melted in the printing machine to bind it to the paper. What specific visual elements do you see that hint at Whitten s exploration with toner? Classroom Activity Review Whitten s examples of work from the 1970s and recall principles of abstract expressionism, gesture and composition. Using combs or similar alternative tools, have students apply paint to paper or canvas, experimenting with Whitten s process. Ask students to form small groups and discuss their experiences using the questions below. How did the comb change the appearance of the paint, as compared with a paintbrush? Were you able to create different levels of intensity or ghosting? Did you introduce multiple colors? How did this technique affect the positive and negative space of your composition? What types of lines and textures did you achieve? How did the comb change your physical experience with the paint? 19