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Study for "Kent"

Artist/Maker (American, 1940–2021)
Date1970
MediumWatercolor and pencil grid on paper
DimensionsImage: 19 1/4 × 15 in. (48.9 × 38.1 cm)
Sheet: 29 15/16 × 22 7/16 in. (76 × 57 cm)
Frame: 41 × 33 × 1 1/2 in. (104.1 × 83.8 × 3.8 cm)
Credit LineMrs. F. F. Prentiss Fund
Object number1971.36
Status
Not on view
Copyright© Chuck CloseMore Information
In the mid-1960s, Chuck Close abandoned his earlier abstract painting style for one more photo-based. In 1968, he began using passport-style images of himself, family, and friends to create colossal portrait heads that appear dispassionate and meticulously detailed even as they dissolve into quasi-pointillist painted areas when seen at close range.

To start, Close overlaid a photograph with a grid and then transferred the image to canvas, square by square. Originally working only in black and white, he turned to color in 1970, limiting himself to the three primary colors, which he mixed together on the work's surface. His process was borrowed from commercial printing in which colors are produced by superimposing layers of transparent color. A transparency of red, blue, and yellow color separations would be made of the original photograph, with dye-transfer sheets produced from those in various combinations. Close used these as a guide in the coloring of the final work, which would be created with the use of numerous working drawings; the AMAM's Study is just one of several drawings for the final, monumental painting Kent (100 × 90 in.; Art Gallery of Ontario). In Oberlin's example, the three colors are shown separately at lower left, with twelve combinations in the same row. The transparent medium of watercolor allows the colors to be overlaid, rather than overtly mixed.

In 1970, the year of this work, Close had one of his earliest exhibitions, Three Young Americans, at the AMAM, along with Ron Cooper and Neil Jenney. Such exhibitions of the work of emerging American artists were prevalent at Oberlin in the late 1950s, '60s, and '70s.
Exhibition History
Chuck Close Portraits
  • Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN (September 21, 1980 - November 16, 1980 )
  • St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO (December 5, 1980 - January 25, 1981 )
  • Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (February 6, 1981 - March 29, 1981 )
  • Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (April 14, 1981 - June 21, 1981 )
Saving Face: The Portrait
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 5, 1986 - September 28, 1986 )
Modern and Contemporary Works from the Permanent Collection
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 21, 1995 - May 27, 1998 )
Chuck Close Retrospective
  • Museum of Modern Art, New York (February 25, 1998 - May 26, 1998 )
Modern Art in America: 20th-Century Works on Paper from the Allen Memorial Art Museum
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (November 15, 2003 - September 2, 2004 )
New Frontiers: American Art Since 1945
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (August 29, 2006 - December 23, 2006 )
Out of Line: Drawings from the Allen from the Twentieth Century and Beyond
  • Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 1, 2009 - December 23, 2009 )
Collections
  • Modern & Contemporary