Jack Whitten 2007
September 13, 2007- October 20, 2007
Reception: September 13, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
526 W 26th St
New York-based artist
Jack Whitten's experiments with painting date to the 1960s, when, inspired by Abstract
Expressionism, he created dynamic works noted for their raucous colors and density of gesture, combined with
topical content—emotionally complex meditations on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the Civil Rights Movement, and the
Vietnam War. In the 1970s, Whitten's experimentation turned towards abstraction, when he developed a method of
painting that he related to photographic technology and printmaking traditions. In this work, hand-made gesture and
brushstroke were abandoned; rather, paint and canvas were “processed”, through an inventive technique using large
troughs to hold paint, and dragging canvas across these pools, with sticks, rakes, and Afro-combs used to create
surface texture, line, and voids. The 1980s saw further experimentation with paint as a metaphor for skin, with
Whitten “casting” surfaces and textures with acrylic paints and compounds. Whitten’s ongoing concerns about the
human condition and natural science remained at the core of his work, at a time when narrative-based and politicallyoriented
content were de rigeur for Black artists. In the 1990s, Whitten's experiments with paint as a medium moved
further towards sculpture, as paint compounds were transformed into mosaic-like tiles and were applied to canvases,
referencing ancient architecture and murals. In this work, and into the current work, memorial and persona became
sources for content, as works paid homage to celebrated figures and close friends of the artist.
In this exhibition at
Alexander Gray Associates, Whitten presents a selection of recent and historical works, including
a group of 1970s works on paper made during one of the first Xerox artist-in residencies. Also on view is a rare 1970s
painting, one of Whitten’s process-based approached to abstraction, and a companion to works in the permanent
collections of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Studio Museum in Harlem.
These works have been read as visual metaphors of Vietnam-era war images broadcast on television, and references
early experimental video practices of the 1970s, with its dynamic black and white horizontal lines and ghosted
movement. Whitten’s 1980s explorations of surface and relief are in evidence with USA Oracle (1986), a
monochrome made of a single cast surface of silver acrylic paint, creating a densely textured topography of screens,
meshes, imprints, and gesture. Recent works in the show are highlights from Whitten’s ongoing memorial series. A
series of uniformly square paintings are constructed out of mosaics of cast acrylic paint, creating pixilated designs
honoring Whitten’s late friends and colleagues, including Al Loving, Al Held, Bobby Short, and Marcia Tucker.
Whitten's work was the subject of solo exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1974, a mid-career
survey show at the Studio Museum in Harlem in 1983, and a solo exhibition at the Newark Museum in 1990. He was
included in the 1969 and 1972 Whitney Museum of American Art’s Annuals, 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 (2006); and High Times Hard Times: New York Painting
1967–1975, organized by Independent Curators International (2006). In Summer/Fall 2007, P.S.1/MoMA Center for
Contemporary Art presented a solo exhibition, combining Whitten's epic 2006 painting, 9.11.01 with paintings from
the 1960s; The Atlanta Center for Contemporary Art is organizing an exhibition of Whitten's memorial works for
Spring 2008.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Alexander Gray Associates | | Address | 526 W 26th St, #1019 New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-399-2636 | | Fax | 212-399-2684 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-6 (Summer hours: Tue-Fri 11-6; Gallery is closed to the public for the month of August.) | |
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