Sixties Surreal

2025

A dark, textured surface with a small, blackened gas mask in the center. The mask reads “INCOMBUSTIBLE.”

Laura Phipps: The central composition of Freedom Now, Number 1 involves a number of different objects all piled on top of each other. The wood scraps, the mouse trap wire tubing, and then doll parts and a protest pin. And this entanglement of all of these objects is very intentional. It creates a feeling of ambiguity in what any one of these objects means on its own. But then Johnson doubles down on that ambiguity by adding this dark tar like substance, this pitch, which is a material that has all sorts of connotations and references in the world, used to waterproof boats, used to make roofing materials, but also has this reference to public humiliation and the idea of tarring and feathering. This violence that I think is inherent in the work as well—that it is hard to separate the material from the history of material and the fact that the material itself is this deep, dark black that makes it hard to see the actual objects in the painting—doesn't occur by accident. Johnson is really digging into these ideas of Blackness. I think that is most recognizable in the “Freedom Now” pin that sort of emerges from this entanglement of objects.

Narrator: Like many of the works in this room, this one begins with protest and transforms it into something more personal and mysterious.

Laura Phipps: Daniel LaRue Johnson traveled to Washington, D.C. and participated in the March on Washington in 1963. And after that trip to D.C. and his time at this protest, he spent some time traveling in states in the American South and collecting objects along his way that he then brought back to Los Angeles where he was establishing his career as an artist. And the objects from those travels and his time in DC made their way into the works that he made at this time, including this work, Freedom Now, Number 1.


Daniel LaRue Johnson, Freedom Now, Number 1, August 13, 1963 - January 14, 1964, 1964. Pitch on canvas with "Freedom Now" button, broken doll, hacksaw, mousetrap, flexible tube, and wood, 53 7/8 × 55 3/8 × 7 1/2 in. (136.6 × 140.5 × 18.9 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York; given anonymously, 4.1965. © Daniel LaRue Johnson

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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