Imperial Valley Press

LA art museum unveils wide-ranging tribute to Jasper Johns

- BY JOHN ROGERS A5

LOS ANGELES — Jasper Johns’ decision more than 60 years ago to paint a picture of an American flag launched what became one of the most heralded artistic careers of modern times.

So it’s fitting The Broad’s latest exhibition, “Jasper Johns: Something Resembling Truth,” begins with a first-floor gallery filled with nearly a dozen of Johns’ most celebrated U.S. flag paintings.

From there, the exhibition goes on to display more than 100 other works, filling gallery after gallery and ranging from paintings and drawings to bronze and metal sculptures to an array of stunning multimedia creations.

The works span more than six decades and compose what Broad officials say is one of the largest retrospect­ives assembled for the 87-year-old artist, whose work helped launch the pop art movement and later merged it with conceptual­ism, abstract expression­ism and other forms.

“It is well-known that Jasper Johns changed the 20th century artistical­ly,” Broad curator and director Joanne Heyler said before leading a media tour through the exhibition this week.

“Johns helped move the conversati­on of art to a new and exciting place by rejecting the establishe­d style of the time, the gestural bravura of abstract expression.”

The exhibition was put together with loans from dozens of museums, private collectors and the artist himself.

Although Johns, who lives in Connecticu­t, hasn’t seen it and museum officials don’t know if he will, Broad co-curator Ed Schad says the artist was intimately involved in its assemblage.

“We sent him a full wooden model of our museum with everything to scale, everything placed, then we went to Sharon, Connecticu­t, and met with him and worked with him to finalize the exhibition,” he said. “I would absolutely love it if he came to see it.

It opened Saturday and runs through May 13.

Like Andy Warhol, Ed Ruscha and other contempora­ries, Johns took art in a different direction in the 1950s and early ‘60s with his decision to focus on intricatel­y detailed, finely crafted interpreta­tions of everyday objects.

Although best-known to the general public for his flag paintings and drawings, his other prominent works include numerous interpreta­tions of bull’s-eye-like targets, sculptures of everyday things like numbers and flashlight­s, painted copies of cross-hatched etchings he saw on a passing car, and stunning mixed-media paintings with the cans, brushes and other objects he used in their making attached to them.

Prominent among the several mixed-media works on display are 1964’s “The Watchman,” an acclaimed abstract painting that has a partial manikin seated upside-down in an attached chair. Another, “Field,” includes a red neon light and other letters and items attached to an oil-on-canvas creation.

Sculptures from Johns’ own collection include his bronzed flashlight­s and slices of “bread.”

“I wanted to make a 3-D format that would sit on a flat surface,” he said of the bronzes in notes for the show. “I wanted it to be something that already existed, and it came to me in a flash, the idea of a flashlight.”

He used a real flashlight covered in sculpted metal for his first one, then created others from scratch.

The realistic-looking “bread” was actually painted paper, lead, copper and wood.

Raised in South Carolina, Johns moved to New York to launch his art career after being stationed with the Army in Japan during the Korean War.

As he shunned the popular abstract movement, he acknowledg­ed struggling at first to create anything he considered satisfacto­ry — until he dreamed one night that he was painting an American flag.

“The next morning, I got up, and I went out and bought the materials to begin it,” he said.

It was a theme he would return to often over decades and one especially well-represente­d at The Broad, where the exhibition includes flag paintings and drawings from the early 1950s to the late 1970s.

Among them is the heralded 1958 “Leo Castelli Flag,” a huge painting created with thick brushstrok­es of encaustic (oil paint mixed with wax) on canvas.

Also included is Johns’ stunning orange-green-and-black rendition, created in 1969. The equally heralded, and fragile, “Three Flags” (1958) is also there on a rare loan from the Whitney Museum of American Art.

They and the other flag paintings are likely to provide much of the exhibition’s wow factor — and for obvious reasons, according to Schad.

“They are extraordin­arily made objects. They can’t be denied as a matter of craftsmans­hip,” Schad said as he stood near one. “And they resonate on that level.”

 ??  ?? Allon Schoener from The Cosmopolit­an Observer joins journalist­s during a media preview of an exhibition by artist Jasper Johns at The Broad in Los Angeles on Wednesday.
Allon Schoener from The Cosmopolit­an Observer joins journalist­s during a media preview of an exhibition by artist Jasper Johns at The Broad in Los Angeles on Wednesday.

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