Become informed & inspired by artists whose works advanced Western Art History.

Target with Four Faces

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California

SFMoMA Gift of the Harry W. and Mary Margaret
Anderson Charitable Foundation: © 2016 Jasper Johns
and Petersburg Press/Licensed by VAGA, New York

Zoom & Explore

Guidance to Describe:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Describe what you see.

People:

Plaster casts represent incomplete, sculpted models of four faces.The eyes and forehead are hidden because the top of the horizontal wood strip intentionally rests on the bridges of their noses. In Zoom mode, notice the image of a man collaged under the target on the left side.

Place:

A wall in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Objects & Things:

Vertical short wood strips frame four plaster casts. Zoom to the faint, word “Biography” collaged under the, far-right face. Two small hinges are spaced to separate the top of the box from the section displaying the faces. The top section is attached to the canvas.

Guidance to Interpret & Conclude:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Use accredited sources.     3. Ignite your imagination.

Interpret:

If you are figuratively going around in circles to understand the artist’s work, this is Jasper Johns’ explanation. “The common shooting target is one of the many things the mind already knows. Using familiar objects gives me room to work on other levels.” The plaster casts recall Classic, Greek architectural, decorative friezes on the exterior of buildings under the roof line, or to interior walls near the ceiling, in mid-5th century BCE. The band of casts were taken from parts of the lower half of the same model’s face, over a period of several months.

Conclude:

The word target has multiple definitions. From an actual game to an object of attack what you take away from this painting/ frieze-like composition is personal. Looking closely, you may see slight differences in the features to suggest masculine and feminine features. Mid-20th century artists ask viewers to stretch their imaginations and grasp the “big picture of ideas,” in everyday objects. Taken as a whole, Johns breaks new ground, in the History of Western Art, with a work-of-art dynamic and daring.

Go back to Era & Artist, Painting, History & Culture. Contact me for help.

SOURCES:
OVERVIEW

VISUAL ARTS ENCYCLOPEDIA. Postmodernist Art. Web.

ARTIST, PAIINTING, HISTORY & CULTURE Johns, Jasper

The New Georgia Encyclopedia, Biography. Online. Encyclopedia. Online. Encyclopedia of World Biography / 2004. Copyright. Web.

Target with Four Faces

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.1979, color etching, soft-ground etching, and aquatint, ed. 45/88; 30 x 22 inches (76.2 x 55.9 cm); Published by Petersburg Press; Fine Arts museums of San Francisco, CA. Web. Anderson Graphic Arts Collection, gift of the Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson Charitable Foundation; © Jasper Johns and Petersburg Press/ Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. MOMA. Web.The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Scull, 1958 Art © Jasper Johns/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY. Web.Photo: MoMA. Courtesy vagarights.com – LC-19 Target with Four Faces. Web. Photo: Class Connections. Web.

Postmodern era, Pre-Pop Art movement

Photo: The Guardian, Art and Design, Richard Hamilton: they called him Daddy pop. Web. Visual Arts Encyclopedia Cork. Postmodern, Experimental artist. Web.

ESSENTIAL TOPIC Subject Matter: Experimentational, Art of Concepts

Visual Arts Encyclopedia, Visual Arts Cork. Web

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Color:

The reflection of light on a surface or an object produces color. The brighter, the more color you see. Primary red, blue, and yellow are dominant. See them on the six-sided "Basic Color Wheel" in View Essential Topic.

Line:

Circular lines create shapes on the 2-dimensional Picture Plane (flat surface). Target with Four Faces represents irregular, biomorphic shapes, resembling living organisms.

Texture:

You do not have to touch something to experience its texture because your brain senses it for you. Imagine the sculptural elements and the raised, impasto (thickly painted) surface of the painted areas.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Focal Point:

Target with Four Faces.

Direction/ Movement:

The faces are arranged in a straight line. The target is created by widening circles expanding from a bull’s-eye.

Variation:

Colors, textures, sculptural elements, circular shapes, collaged (glued) materials, and the wood frame combine in a curious fashion, to avoid monotony.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Perspective is an artful illusion.

No.

Flat Perspective:

The entire Picture Plane is shown with the same clarity. Foreground, Middle ground, and Background are lacking. Johns eliminates the need to create an illusion of depth/ distance, in his composition.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Experimentation.

Postmodern, Experimentational Art:

Jasper Johns’ method dates back to the 6th century. Encaustic painting involves hot beeswax mixed with colored pigments. The paste is usually applied to prepared wood. He adds sculpt metal designed for craft hobbyists rather than serious sculptors. He is one of the few exponents of this technique.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Characteristics.

Era:

Postmodern/ The Age of Postmodernist Art (1970 – present)

Movement:

Abstract Expressionist,American, Pre-Pop art, Collagist painter (1955).

Characteristics of Style:

Familiar things are used in unexpected ways. Double meaning. Conflicting feelings are created. It looks like a target but, is it really?