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Jasper Johns, Regrets, 2014

Regrets, 2014

Intaglio
on Hahnemuhle Black
26 1/4 x 34 1/8 in. (66.68 x 86.68 cm)
Edition of 10

About this Edition

Jasper Johns stands as an important bridge between abstract expressionism and pop and minimal art. Printmaking has long been an important part of the process for the artist, seamlessly relating with his painting and drawing practice.

A profound representation of this relationship comes from Regrets, a cohesive group of paintings, drawings, and prints which were on view at The Museum of Modern Art in the 2014 exhibition Jasper Johns: Regrets. The Regrets prints came from exploring the visual motif Johns previously worked through in the drawings and paintings. Johns worked on the two plates for the prints alongside master printer John Lund in his Sharon, CT studio, followed by the printing and editioning at Universal Limited Art Editions in Bay Shore, NY.

The two editions printed on white paper appeared in the exhibition at MoMA alongside the original plates. Johns later collaborated with ULAE director Bill Goldston about the possibility of printing each plate on black paper. The final results yielded three editions printed on black paper to accompany the editions on white paper. For an in-depth look into Regrets, view the Jasper Johns: Regrets studio feature.

About the Artist

B. 1930 Jasper Johns moved to New York in 1949 and began paintings influenced by abstract expressionism. Introduced to Robert Rauschenberg, John Cage, and Merce Cunningham in the mid 1950's, his work changed radically. The first of many one-person exhibitions at Leo Castelli Gallery (1958) led to his inclusion the following year in the Museum of Modern Art's landmark 16 Americans. One-person exhibitions of his paintings, drawings, prints, and sculpture have been organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art (1977), the National Gallery of Art 1990), and the Museum of Modern Art (1986, 1996).

Jasper Johns stands as an important bridge between abstract expressionism and pop and minimal art. Printmaking has long been an important part of the process for the artist. He first worked at ULAE in 1960. Initially, lithography suited Johns and enabled him to create print versions of iconic depiction of flags, maps, and targets that filled his paintings, such as Target, 1960. In 1967, Johns expanded his repertoire to etching and created Target I and Light Bulb. In 1971, Johns became the first artist at ULAE to use the handfed offset lithographic press, resulting in Decoy- an image realized in printmaking before it was made in drawing or painting. Since then, Johns has become a master of both media and continues making prints with subjects as varied as the seasons, creative reinterpretations of Holbein, and curious faces and features combined with everyday objects.

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