{"data":{"id":"11246","type":"artwork","attributes":{"id":11246,"topgoose_id":6418,"portfolio_id":null,"tms_id":11246,"title":"No Title","display_artist_text":"Raymond Pettibon","display_date":"1987","accession_number":"97.19.1","dimensions":"Sheet: 12 × 8 13/16 in. (30.5 × 22.4 cm)","medium":"Brush and ink on paper","department":"collection","classification":"Drawings","credit_line":"Purchase, with funds from the Drawing Committee","is_virtual":false,"is_portfolio":false,"portfolio_tms_id":null,"portfolio":null,"edition":null,"publication_info":"","description":"\u003cp\u003eRaymond Pettibon, \u003cem\u003eNo Title\u003c/em\u003e, 1987. Brush and ink on paper, sheet: 12 × 8 13/16 in. (30.5 × 22.4 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Drawing Committee 97.19.1\u003c/p\u003e","object_label":"\u003cp\u003eRaymond Pettibon’s notebook-size \u003ci\u003eNo Title\u003c/i\u003e consists of a broadly drawn ink likeness of a sword descending from a cloud, boldly limned in a manner reminiscent of comic book rendering. This motif appears frequently in Pettibon’s prodigious body of drawings, it is always accompanied by different texts—which, in the artist’s characteristic fashion, range from the irreverent to the abstruse, the hilarious to the poignant. In this drawing, the image is accompanied by two lines of hand-scrawled prose: “What is their covering of themselves and their instruments with invisibility?” and “From finest cirrus rain pours down.” Echoing the fugitive syntax of these lines is Pettibon’s explanation of the sword-and-cloud image: it is “about the randomness of death and illness which would make you believe there is no center of fate and governing…no higher power.” Yet however paradoxical, the language used in Pettibon’s drawings admits a complex, literary pedigree. He often borrows excerpts from the eclectic list of authors he admires; here, the first line of prose is from \u003ci\u003eNarratives of the witchcraft cases\u003c/i\u003e, 1648-1706, Volume 16, 1914, edited by George Lincoln Burr. By combining disparate texts to engage shifts in tone and style, Pettibon mirrors his unexpected juxtapositions of language and image.\u003c/p\u003e","ai_alt_text":"Black ink drawing of a cloud with a sharp rain spike and handwritten text about cirrus rain.","alt_text":null,"visual_description":null,"on_view":false,"created_at":"2017-08-30T16:04:15.000-04:00","updated_at":"2026-02-06T12:00:00.395-05:00","images":[{"id":102047,"url":"https://whitneymedia.org/assets/artwork/11246/97_19_1_cropped.jpg"}]},"relationships":{"artists":{"data":[{"id":"4767","type":"artist"}]}}}}