Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror

2021

Hear from artists, curators, and scholars on selected works from the exhibition.

Tessellation of red, yellow, and blue striped patches, with alternating stencil lettering at the bottom edge of the composition reading "DANCERS ON A PLANE JASPER JOHNS 1979", and with spoons, forks, and knives running outside the left and right sides of the painting.

Narrator: In Dancers on a Plane, Johns made vibrant use of a red, yellow, and blue crosshatch pattern.

Scott Rothkopf: He remembers that he originally saw this shape or pattern on a car that was passing him on the road. It caught his attention and became something he used again, and again. Here, if you look closely at the painting, you see there’s a central vertical seam from the top to the bottom, that creates a line. The painting mirrors itself across this scene. That’s called bilateral symmetry. It’s actually pretty common. People are mostly bilaterally symmetrical, animals, a lot of plants. This painting appears in this gallery about mirroring and doubling, because it shows Johns’s interest in the very process of mirroring. How, in some cases, the mirror creates a perfect reflection.

The painting is called Dancers on a Plane, and it’s dedicated to Merce Cunningham, who was a great dancer, choreographer, and friend of Jasper Johns. If you look at this painting and imagine the way that it invokes the human body, by that early symmetrical figure at the center, you get a sense of movement, a liveliness, a sense maybe of dancing, that the marks are responding to one another, to us as we look at them.


Jasper Johns, Dancers on a Plane, 1979. Oil on canvas and partially painted wood frame with objects, 77 7/8 × 64 1/8 in. (197.8 × 162.9 cm). Collection of the artist; on long-term loan to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 2000. © 2021 Jasper Johns / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph courtesy the Wildenstein Plattner Institute, New York

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