Happy 4th from your friends at Jasper - The Word on Columbia Arts

“One night I dreamed that I painted a large American flag,” Johns has said of this work, “and the next morning I got up and I went out and bought the materials to begin it.” Those materials included three canvases that he mounted on plywood, strips of newspaper, and encaustic paint—a mixture of pigment and molten wax that has formed a surface of lumps and smears. The newspaper scraps visible beneath the stripes and forty-eight stars lend this icon historical specificity. The American flag is something “the mind already knows,” Johns has said, but its execution complicates the representation and invites close inspection. A critic of the time encapsulated this painting’s ambivalence, asking, “Is this a flag or a painting?”  -- (from the Museum of Modern Art's Gallery Label text, 2011)

 

When Johns made Flag, the dominant American art was Abstract Expressionism, which enthroned the bold, spontaneous use of gesture and color to evoke emotional response. Johns, though, had begun to paint common, instantly recognizable symbols—flags, targets, numbers, letters. Breaking with the idea of the canvas as a field for abstract personal expression, he painted "things the mind already knows." Using the flag, Johns said, "took care of a great deal for me because I didn't have to design it." That gave him "room to work on other levels"—to focus his attention on the making of the painting.

The color, for example, is applied not to canvas but to strips of newspaper—a material almost too ordinary to notice. Upon closer inspection, though, those scraps of newsprint are as hard to ignore as they are to read. Also, instead of working with oil paint, Johns chose encaustic, a mixture of pigment and molten wax that has left a surface of lumps and smears; so that even though one recognizes the image in a second, close up it becomes textured and elaborate. It is at once impersonal, or public, and personal; abstract and representational; easily grasped and demanding of close attention.  -- (From The Museum of Modern Art, MoMA Highlights, New York: The Museum of Modern Art, revised 2004, originally published 1999, p. 232.

Temple Ligon and Le Tour du Monde en Quatre-vingts Jours -- via Jasper

On Wednesday, our friend and future Jasper contributor John Temple Ligon launches his interpretation of Phileas Fogg's fictional journey around the world in 80 days. Temple is being as true to Fogg's intentions as sanity will allow, going so far as to forgo air travel -- hot air balloons not being what they used to, and all.

We'll be seeing Temple off as he leaves from Columbia's version of the Reform Club on Wednesday evening at 6 pm to travel to Florence, SC where he will journey via Amtrak to New York City's not-what-it-used-to-be Penn Station. While in New York, Temple will pay homage to some of our namesake's art before he boards the Queen Victoria on Friday, March 16th.

While we are no The Morning Chronicle, we have invited our intrepid wanderer to keep Jasper posted of his adventures first hand. As we await his missives however we, like the rest of the world, will be following his sojourn via the miracle of technology.

You can do so as well by visiting the website for the Wren Institute for Urban Research.

Bon Voyage, Temple.

(And best of luck finding your Princess Aouda.)

~~ Jasper