Jasper Johns: Mind/Mirror

2021

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

Wide rectangular composition of blue-gray brushstrokes, with a vertical band of a muted colorful diamond pattern running down most of the right-hand side; string pinned to the left and right sides of the frame and arcs across the composition from the lower left to the upper right corners.

Scott Rothkopf: Catenary (I Call to the Grave) is one of the largest paintings from the Catenary series that Johns began making in the late 1990s.

Narrator: Scott Rothkopf.

Scott Rothkopf: The word “catenary” describes a curve that’s created by gravity, when a string is held from two fixed points. You see that in suspension bridges, or here on the surface where you have the string hanging from the top right edge and coming down to the left.

Johns’s Catenary paintings are dark and moody. They remind me of some of the earlier paintings in his career, but here, he’s making them as an older man. You see this string traversing, this large expanse, and it seems fragile, fluttering in the air of the gallery, casting a shadow. It’s been compared by some, to the fragile thread of life, if we think about how one ages. At the bottom of the painting, you see an inscription that says, “I Call to the Grave,” which is a phrase from the Old Testament prophet, Job, where he was being tested by God and was thinking about death as being the only solution to his troubles. These paintings are very powerful, when one thinks of an artist who is approaching, in this case, the age of seventy, making work to some degree about death or the end of life. I find this series one of the most moving in all of Johns’s career.


Jasper Johns, Catenary (I Call to the Grave), 1998. Encaustic on canvas with objects, 78 × 118 in. (198.1 × 299.7 cm). Philadelphia Museum of Art; 125th Anniversary Acquisition; purchased with funds contributed by Gisela and Dennis Alter, Keith L. and Katherine Sachs, Frances and Bayard Storey, The Dietrich Foundation, Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest, Mr. and Mrs. Brook Lenfest, Marsha and Jeffrey Perelman, Jane and Leonard Korman, Mr. and Mrs. Berton E. Korman, Mr. and Mrs. William T. Vogt, Dr. and Mrs. Paul Richardson, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Ross, Ella B. Schaap, Eileen and Stephen Matchett, and other donors, 2001-91-1a–d. © 2021 Jasper Johns / VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photograph courtesy the Philadelphia Museum of Art

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