Jack Whitten; ATLANTA CONTEMPORARY ART CENTER.
Auslander, Philip
It is fitting that one of the works in this group of Jack
Whitten's memorial paintings is dedicated to the art critic and
ideologue Clement Greenberg, for the problematic that Greenberg judged
to be central to modernist painting is palpable in Whitten's work.
Greenberg famously posited modernism as the progressive purification of
each art to its essential formal characteristics; in the case of
painting, this meant eschewing representation in favor of abstraction.
For more than forty years, Whitten, in producing elegies to various
individuals, including many African-American cultural luminaries, has
returned again and again to the question of how a painting can
simultaneously serve both the basic human impulse to memorialize and the
tenets of modernist abstraction.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
It is clear that Whitten's memorials are largely
subject-driven, as his style varies with the person represented. Least
successful are the most literal or denotative works, where the
connection between person and image seems obvious. Far more compelling
are those in which the connections are less apparent, or in which there
is tension between the subject and the formal means.
For example, Whitten celebrates the cabaret singer Bobby Short in E
Stamp II (The Black Butterfly: For Bobby Short), 2007, a painting whose
patterns derive from those that appear on downloadable postage stamps.
The work is at once a painting and a mosaic, resulting as it does from a
technique Whitten has employed since the early 1990s, in which he uses
small squares of hardened acrylic paint as tesserae. The primarily
velvety black composition is inflected with light blue and sparkling
gold tiles, with which Whitten has formed a circle and two lines
dividing the square work into quadrants. While the representation of
Bobby Short, the epitome of smooth cabaret elegance, in rich black and
gold is certainly apt, it also feels a bit obvious.
Black Table Setting (Homage to Duke Ellington), 1974, is a
similarly elegant composition of sweeping horizontal lines of black
paint streaked with ocher, deep red, and light gray. While the palette
and refinement of the image may express Ellington's musical
approach. Whitten produced the work by making a single stroke with a
squeegee across a canvas loaded with paint. This bravura gesture,
planned but open to accident, suggests an artistic sensibility quite
different from that which led Ellington to compose and arrange music so
meticulously. The contrast between the subject and the means makes the
work more provocative than a conventional homage.
It is enjoyable to imagine that Greenberg, who apparently was
favorably impressed with some of Whitten's early work, would have
hated The Space Is Clement (for Clem Greenberg), 1994. The image is
abstract: A line made up of blue and green tesserae snakes through a
lighter blue field. But Greenberg surely would have thought that Whitten
intended his acrylic paint chips, which are hard and often shiny, to
resemble traditional ceramic or glass mosaic tiles. Such illusionistic
representation, and the presence of hair and other detritus on the
surface of the work, indeed the whole concept of "mixed
media," flies in the face of Greenbergian purism. What more
appropriate memorial to the cantankerous art critic than an equally
cantankerous rejoinder from an artist?