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jasper JOHNS

The work of Jasper Johns affected nearly every artistic movement from the 1950s through the present day. Johns engaged with modernist precedents like the original Dada movement and Abstract Expressionism in order to actively refute the hierarchy of modernism that reduced the aesthetic experience to the distinct material qualities of the medium and removed it from the viewer's life. By representing common objects and images in the realm of fine art, Johns broke down the boundaries traditionally separating fine art and everyday life. He effectively laid the foundation for the Pop art movement's aesthetic embrace of commodity culture with his playfully subversive appropriation of common signs and products. Johns' exploration of semiotics and perception also set the stage for both the Conceptual art movement and the Postmodern movement of the following decades, while his multimedia collaborations with John Cage, Robert Rauschenberg, and Merce Cunningham ushered in the dominance of the performance art movement in the 60s and 70s.
visual elements
bronze sculptures
saturated color
universal symbols: flags, targets, numbers
encaustic paintings

in his words

Jasper Johns created artworks that seemed to defy expressionism by presenting common objects and symbols, which some read as "nonexpressive." However, Johns didn't belive that anything could say nothing, and his artworks are charged with hidden meaning. 

themes in johns work

related artists

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