Jack Whitten: I Am The Object

Jack Whitten: I Am The Object

Hauser & Wirth 32 E. 69th StreetNew York, NY 10021, USA Thursday, November 5, 2020–Saturday, January 23, 2021


totem 2000 viii: for janet carter (a truly sweet lady)  by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

Totem 2000 VIII: For Janet Carter (A Truly Sweet Lady)

Price on Request

mask iii: for the children of dunblane, scotland by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

Mask III: For the Children of Dunblane, Scotland, 1996

Price on Request

mask iii by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

Mask III, 1991

Price on Request

mask ii: for ronald brown by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

Mask II: For Ronald Brown, 1996

Price on Request

my argiroula: for argiro galeraki  by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

My Argiroula: For Argiro Galeraki , 1995

Price on Request

totem 2000 iii by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

Totem 2000 III, 2000

Price on Request

memory sites by jack whitten

Jack Whitten

Memory Sites

Price on Request

Beginning 5 November 2020, Hauser & Wirth New York will present rarely seen works made by American artist Jack Whitten (1939 – 2018). The exhibition focuses on his practice from 1991 through 2000, a period of intense experimentation during which, deeply affected by tumultuous world events, he strove to incorporate them into his work. Blurring the boundaries between sculpture and painting, and between the studio and the world, the multidimensional works on view combine geometric abstraction and found objects to mine spiritual and metaphysical thematic veins.

Among works on view are examples from Whitten’s Totem and Mask series of paintings, powerful elegiac works inspired by contemporary events that held deep significance for the artist. These commemorative works reveal Whitten’s ongoing fascination with African sculpture and his use of unconventional materials – acrylic, recycled glass, plywood and eggshells – in intricate, mosaic-like compositions. In ‘Mask II: For Ronald Brown’ (1996), Whitten recalls the Commerce Secretary in President Bill Clinton’s cabinet, whose untimely death in a plane crash was mourned in the Black community across America. Whitten’s homage to Brown contains layers of reference imagery forming a triangle, reflecting the symbiotic relationship between spirituality, thought, and syntax. For Whitten, honoring the contributions by important Black figures was a recurrent theme in his work, as seen with his Black Monolith series.