Afbeelding auteur

Ray Johnson (1) (1927–1995)

Auteur van Ray Johnson: How Sad I Am Today...

Voor andere auteurs genaamd Ray Johnson, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

22+ Werken 94 Leden 2 Besprekingen

Werken van Ray Johnson

Gerelateerde werken

Illuminations, and Other Prose Poems (1957) — Omslagontwerper — 625 exemplaren
Vainglory, Inclinations, Caprice (1951) — Omslagontwerper, sommige edities145 exemplaren
Pop Art Redefined (1969) — Medewerker — 67 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1927-10-16
Overlijdensdatum
1995-01-13
Geslacht
male
Geboorteplaats
Detroit, Michigan, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Sag Harbor, New York, USA
Beroepen
artist
Organisaties
Black Mountain College

Leden

Besprekingen

A book devoted to the works of Ray Johnson and John Willenbecher. Contains facsimiles of Johnson’s mail art which includes postcards, drawings, appropriations, collage, and correspondence, as well as a stream of consciousness artist statement. Includes “Happy Membership,” a curious written piece on the New York Correspondance School, the group led by Johnson that is often credited with originating mail art as a form. Also includes the essay “John Willenbecher: Pyramids, Spheres, and Labyrinths” by William Wilson, which originally appeared in Ideas in Contemporary Art Magazine (Vol. 49, No. 7, March 1975), as well as a biographical statement by Willenbecher.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
petervanbeveren | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 24, 2021 |
Pioneer of mail art and an early participant in both the Pop and Fluxus movements, Ray Johnson created complex, punning works that ingeniously combine text and image, celebrity culture and art history, wit and melancholy. Figures such as Mickey Mouse, Elvis Presley, James Dean, Michael Jackson and Calvin Klein models populate his many collages―a candid foreshadowing of current societal obsession. In the 20 years since his death, Johnson's work has become an increasingly accurate depiction of our fragmented and overstimulated society and includes some of the most recognizable imagery from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Beautifully designed, this massive compendium includes 296 color reproductions of collages, drawings, interventions and other ephemera from Johnson's estate.
Born in Detroit, Michigan, Ray Johnson (1927–1995) studied under Josef Albers and Robert Motherwell at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, and worked as a painter early in his career, exhibiting alongside Ad Reinhardt and Charmion von Wiegand before embracing pop imagery, collage and mail art, producing thousands of collages and other works on paper. His life and death (by suicide, jumping from a bridge in Sag Harbor, Long Island) were the subject of the award-winning documentary How to Draw a Bunny (2002).
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
petervanbeveren | 1 andere bespreking | Jan 2, 2019 |

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Statistieken

Werken
22
Ook door
3
Leden
94
Populariteit
#199,202
Waardering
4.2
Besprekingen
2
ISBNs
19
Talen
2

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