Shifting Landscapes 

2024

A van and truck drive through a dimly lit tunnel, with blurred lights creating a sense of motion and depth.

Jane Dickson: I'm Jane Dickson, and I'm going to talk about my painting, the Lincoln Tunnel on AstroTurf.

I was in Home Depot to get some bolts and nuts or something, and I saw a roll of AstroTurf hanging from the ceiling, and it was like 8 feet wide and infinitely long, green and I was like, oh my God, that's so beautiful. I was like, how much is this?

This group of paintings of bridges and tunnels was inspired by the aftermath of 9/11. I lived in Tribeca near the World Trade Towers, and after the fall of the towers, everyone was worried about where we would be attacked next. So whenever I would get in my car to leave the Island of Manhattan, I would find myself exploring the equation of which would be a worse way to go? In the tunnel or from the bridge if they got blown up. So the bridges and tunnels, which are marvels of engineering, also became zones of anxiety, and I explored both of those in this series. So it's the mundane, you're in traffic, but in fact everybody's on edge.

I seem to manage pretty much, in all of my work, having an underlying sense of dread that seeps in there. I've been, in all my work, interested in the fact that what I think about the subtext somehow is able to be conveyed to the audience and people get it. They always get it.


Jane Dickson, Heading in – Lincoln Tunnel 3, 2003. Oil on Astroturf, 33 × 46 × 2 3/8in. (83.8 × 116.8 × 6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Eve Ahearn and Joseph Ahearn 2017.275. © Jane Dickson

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