“Most of the time was spent on a painting and a few drawings and a print that took more time than usual to resolve and is now, finally, being printed-I hope!” “I was able to work in the studio without as much interruption as typically occurs,” Johns says. (In the 1990s, he had a rubber stamp made that said “Regrets, Jasper Johns,” which he’d use to decline invitations and requests the stamp found its way into a series of works shown at the Museum of Modern Art in 2014 under the title “Regrets.”) During the pandemic, Johns took the opportunity at his estate in Sharon, Connecticut, to toil away unfettered on the multiple projects he always has going-or at least less fettered than usual. Johns has developed a Zen-like threshold for uncomfortable silences-a skill that, at 91, he has refined to an art in itself. He has just never been interested in the public parts of being an artist that involve submitting himself as a specimen for examination. He isn’t humorless in fact, he’s the opposite. Johns has always been reluctant (and unwilling) to “explain” himself or his work. A quick google search shows Hicri Hasson died in 1996 at the age of 35.To say that Jasper Johns is ambivalent about having to discuss the intentions or meanings behind his art would imply that there is some part of it he doesn’t find distasteful. Actually, no, they weren’t watching it they were in it.Ģ020 UPDATE: It occurred to me to check the chronology in Johns’ catalogue raisonée, and lo, a 1973 photo from the terrace of Johns’ house in St Martin includes a slightly older Hickri Hasson in a coat and tie. So whether they’re a he or a they, the kids in these photos had a front row seat to New York art history in the making. Information on Lloyd’s work is alarmingly scarce, though he talked on WNYC about a 1968 Studio Museum show, and there are papers for the Store-Front Museum he founded and ran in Jamaica, Queens. Is that Hicri? I’m leaning toward no, even though there’s plenty of growing for a 10yo to do in a year and a half. Van Raay captured young Lloyd at least three times: twice with a (presumably) toy rifle, and once with a sign demanding the museum open a Martin Luther King wing. Among the marchers was the son of the artist Tom Lloyd, who helped organize BECC. UPDATE? Have you seen me? On photographer Jan van Raay covered a protest at MoMA by the Black Emergency Cultural Coalition. Hicri holding Jasper Johns’ cat, next to Jasper Johns, October 1971 image:Suzi Gablik papers, AAA/SI Hicri helping Jasper Johns get into a cab, October 1971 image:Suzi Gablik papers, AAA/SI Hicri in Jasper Johns’ kitchen, perhaps with a family member or two? October 1971 image:Suzi Gablik papers, AAA/SI (Hicri, that is, not the cat.) Me, I just wonder what it was like hanging around the studio back then it seems unimaginable, but probably memorable. Some folks at the AAA had wondered what Johns’ cat’s name was, and I thought Hicri might know. There’s a photo of Hicri helping Jap carry stuff to a cab, and it’s labeled “Off to St. It’s possible Hicri’d hang out there while his mother or some other family members worked for Johns there’s a snapshot of Hicri in Johns’ kitchen corner, surrounded by the preparations for a meal or a party. Gablik’s scrapbooks are now in the Archives of American Art. Artist/writer Suzi Gablik took these photos and captioned them in her scrapbook as Hicri & Jap. This was October 1971, Johns had his studio at The Bank, as it was called, a sprawling 1912 building at 225 East Houston St, on the corner of Essex. Hi, are you or do you know Hicri, the 10 year-old or so kid in the picture brushing Jasper Johns’ cat? With the grape-eating monkey in a cage behind you? If so, I’d love to hear your story. Hicri brushing Jasper Johns’ cat, next to a Warhol Heinz box, with a monkey in a cage in the background, October 1971 image:Suzi Gablik papers, AAA/SI
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |