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Flag by Jasper Johns in the Museum of Modern Art, October 2010
Jasper Johns
Flag
1954-55 (dated on reverse 1954)
“One night I dreamed that I painted a large American flag, and the next morning I got up and went out and bought the materials to begin it,” Johns once said. Look closely and you can see the scraps of newspaper he painted over with a mixture of hot wax and color, a technique called encaustic. You might also notice that there are only forty-eight stars instead of fifty. When Johns made this work of art, Hawaii and Alaska were not yet part of the United States. How else is Flag different from other flags you’ve seen? How is it similar?
Kids label from 2022
Additional text
“It all began...with my painting a picture of an American flag,” Johns remarked in 1959 in reference to this work. Flag was made on a cut bedsheet using oil paint and then encaustic, a method involving pigmented melted wax. Johns dipped strips of cloth and newsprint into the hot wax and then affixed them to the sheet to fill in a penciled outline of the flag. The result is a picture whose process is registered on its surface, a focus on materiality at odds with the expressionistic gestures dominant in painting at the time of Flag’s making. Johns went on to use encaustic to render familiar forms—flags, targets, numbers, letters, and a map of the United States—time and again throughout his career.
Flag constitutes both a thing (a flag) and its representation (a painting of a flag). This built-in ambiguity is the work’s innovation as well as its provocation. MoMA’s founding director, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., hoped to acquire the piece along with three others from Johns’s first solo exhibition, in 1958 at New York’s Leo Castelli Gallery. However, the Museum’s Committee and Board of Trustees deemed Flag to be potentially “unpatriotic.” Barr circumvented their objections by asking architect Philip Johnson to acquire the work and donate it to the Museum at a later date.
Publication excerpt from MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art, New York (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019)
The forty-eight stars and red-and-white stripes depicted here picture an American flag from the year this work was made. Johns noted that using a recognizable image took care of a great deal for him because he didn’t have to design it. He made this work by combining panels, paint, and encaustic—a mixture of pigment and melted wax that captured the paint’s drips, smears, and brushstrokes. Beneath the flag’s familiar stripes, we can make out a collage of newspaper scraps whose dates locate this commonplace symbol within a particular moment.
Gallery label from "Collection 1940s—1970s," 2019
Medium: Encaustic, oil, and collage on fabric mounted on plywood, three panels
Dimensions: 42 1/4 x 60 5/8" (107.3 x 153.8 cm)
Credit: Gift of Philip Johnson in honor of Alfred H. Barr, Jr.
Object number: 106.1973
Department: Painting and Sculpture
Text from: www.moma.org/collection/works/78805
Flag
1954-55 (dated on reverse 1954)
“One night I dreamed that I painted a large American flag, and the next morning I got up and went out and bought the materials to begin it,” Johns once said. Look closely and you can see the scraps of newspaper he painted over with a mixture of hot wax and color, a technique called encaustic. You might also notice that there are only forty-eight stars instead of fifty. When Johns made this work of art, Hawaii and Alaska were not yet part of the United States. How else is Flag different from other flags you’ve seen? How is it similar?
Kids label from 2022
Additional text
“It all began...with my painting a picture of an American flag,” Johns remarked in 1959 in reference to this work. Flag was made on a cut bedsheet using oil paint and then encaustic, a method involving pigmented melted wax. Johns dipped strips of cloth and newsprint into the hot wax and then affixed them to the sheet to fill in a penciled outline of the flag. The result is a picture whose process is registered on its surface, a focus on materiality at odds with the expressionistic gestures dominant in painting at the time of Flag’s making. Johns went on to use encaustic to render familiar forms—flags, targets, numbers, letters, and a map of the United States—time and again throughout his career.
Flag constitutes both a thing (a flag) and its representation (a painting of a flag). This built-in ambiguity is the work’s innovation as well as its provocation. MoMA’s founding director, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., hoped to acquire the piece along with three others from Johns’s first solo exhibition, in 1958 at New York’s Leo Castelli Gallery. However, the Museum’s Committee and Board of Trustees deemed Flag to be potentially “unpatriotic.” Barr circumvented their objections by asking architect Philip Johnson to acquire the work and donate it to the Museum at a later date.
Publication excerpt from MoMA Highlights: 375 Works from The Museum of Modern Art, New York (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019)
The forty-eight stars and red-and-white stripes depicted here picture an American flag from the year this work was made. Johns noted that using a recognizable image took care of a great deal for him because he didn’t have to design it. He made this work by combining panels, paint, and encaustic—a mixture of pigment and melted wax that captured the paint’s drips, smears, and brushstrokes. Beneath the flag’s familiar stripes, we can make out a collage of newspaper scraps whose dates locate this commonplace symbol within a particular moment.
Gallery label from "Collection 1940s—1970s," 2019
Medium: Encaustic, oil, and collage on fabric mounted on plywood, three panels
Dimensions: 42 1/4 x 60 5/8" (107.3 x 153.8 cm)
Credit: Gift of Philip Johnson in honor of Alfred H. Barr, Jr.
Object number: 106.1973
Department: Painting and Sculpture
Text from: www.moma.org/collection/works/78805
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