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Today at the Museum

May 26, 2013

A Taste of Asia

1 – 2 p.m.

Frank
Title:Frank
Artist:Chuck Close
Date:1969
Creation Place:North America, United States
Credit Line:The John R. Van Derlip Fund
Image Copyright:© Chuck Close, courtesy PaceWildenstein, New York
Accession Number:69.137
The model for this painting was not Frank himself but rather an 8 x 10-inch photograph of him. In the 1960s, Chuck Close photographed his subjects and then meticulously copied the photographic images, in paint, onto large canvases. With this painstaking technique, he preserved the objectivity of photography. Close also simulated the way the camera, like the human eye, focuses on one area at a time, leaving other areas blurred. By these means, he directed our attention to some intriguing aspects of visual perception. A work of such grand scale--typical of American painting after 1950--is unsettling, particularly when it features a colossal human head. "The large scale," Close explained, "forces the viewer to read the surface of the painting differently...[to] look at it piece by piece." The details, then, can be perceived either as facial pores and hairs or as an abstract pattern of black, gray, and white.