Become informed & inspired by artists whose works advanced Western Art History.

Self-Portrait

Museum of Modern Art, NY, New York

© Chuck Close. Gift of Agnes Gundy
Jo Carole & Ronald S. Lauder, Donald L. Bryant, Jr.
Leon Black, Michael and Judy Ovitz, Anna Marie
and Robert F. Shapiro, Leila and Melville Straus
Doris and Donald Fisher and purchase

Zoom & Explore

Guidance to Describe:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Describe what you see.

People:

Charles “Chuck” Close crops the top of his head, ear, and beard. Steel grey hair, and a well-groomed mustache/ goatee compliment his strong features.

Place:

Museum of Modern Art, in New York City.

Objects & Things:

Close wears stylish eyeglasses. Each multi-colored cell, on the canvas, looks like an individual painting viewed under a microscope. Look at them, in Zoom mode.

Guidance to Interpret & Conclude:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Use accredited sources.     3. Ignite your imagination.

Interpret:

Charles Thomas (Chuck) Close masters his “face blindness” for his art. Every pore on Close’s ginormous neck-up Self-Portrait is driven by a desire to create flawless work. He paints his pictures back and forth, from one corner to the other, using his grid method. The artist’s skin represents a network of adjacent quirky shapes. Some of the cell-like, squiggles contain X’s and O’s—symbols for kisses and hugs. These happy little symbols express good feelings and acceptance of people and things. Here you see the essence within the soul of Chuck Close.

Conclude:

Close’s use of advanced photographic equipment raises the bar of portraiture to a previously unimagined level. Painstaking attention to color and brushstrokes continues non-stop. The painting is abstract up-close yet realistic from a distance. Zoom mode confirms Close’s artistry. Looking at his collection of portraits, it is apparent the Photo Portraitist pushes himself into new frontiers. Chuck Close describes his work: “I think most paintings are a record of the decisions that the artist made. I just perhaps make them a little clearer than some people have.”

Go back to Era & Artist, Painting, History & Culture. Contact me for help.

SOURCES:
OVERVIEW

VISUAL ARTS ENCYCLOPEDIA – Postmodernist art. Web.

ARTIST, PAINTING, HISTORY & CULTURE Close, Thomas “Chuck”

Guggenheim Museum – New York. NY. Collection – online/ artists/ bios. Web. Close. Resources: Columbia Encyclopedia/ Britannica Online Encyclopedia © 2013. Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc. Web. Encyclopedia.com videos: search Chuck Close. Web. Photo: Katonah Museum of Art, Charles Thomas (Chuck) Close, Portrait. Web.

Self- Portrait

Museum of Modern art. 1997. Oil on canvas. 8’ x 7’ (259.1 x 213.4 cm) Gift of Agnes Gund, Jo Carole and Ronald S. Lauder, Donald L. Bryant, Jr., Leon Black, Michael and Judy Ovitz, Anna Marie and Robert F. Shapiro, Leila and Melville Straus, Doris and Donald Fisher, and purchase MoMA Number 215.2000. © 2013. Chuck Close. MOMA Collection/ objects. Web. ART ENCYCLOPEDIA 2013. “Chuck Close Biography of American Photorealist Painter, Portraitist.” Web. You Tube. Video: “Super-realist Painting Method.” Web. You Tube. Video: “Chuck Close: A Portrait in Progress, Trailer.” Web.

Postmodern era, Pop Art movement

Visual arts Encyclopedia, Postmodernism will be superseded by a newer “ism.” “A grid method of painting.” Web.

ESSENTIAL TOPIC Subject Matter: Contemporary Portraiture

Visual Arts Cork history of art definitions. Contemporary art “photo-realism” microscopic exactness. Web.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Color:

Close chooses secondary colors made up of two mixed primary neighbors, in lighter values (tints) and darker values (shades). The artist adds black for drama and white to highlight. Open the six-sided "Basic Color Wheel", to see the colors in View Essential Topic.

Line:

A Line is the path of a moving point, it can be of any length or width. Lines create shapes. Close’s cells are squares and rectangles, the interiors suggest irregular, amoeboid organisms.

Positive Space:

Marks dominate the composition. Negative Space is lacking.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. You may see things differently.

Direction/ Movement:

Close uses color, line, and shape (Elements of Art) to take you on a visual path to explore this super-sized, busy painting.

Repetition/ Rhythm:

An undulating rhythm is created by the contrast between light and dark blended areas. Close’s placement of countless, visual units in repetitive, regular, and irregular patterns flow nonstop. Perhaps, Mr. Close is listening to music?

Variation:

Multiple changes in the elements of a composition create variation. Close fills his Picture Plane (flat surface) with one unique unit after another.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Perspective is an artful illusion.

No.

Flat Perspective:

The entire Picture Plane is painted with the same clarity. Foreground, Middle ground, and Background do not exist in this painting. Close’s style does not require the illusion of depth/ distance.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.      2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider new Subject Matter.

Photorealistic Portraiture:

A “neck-up” portrait describes Self-Portrait.

Mr. Close can only recognize peoples’ faces on a flat surface because of “face blindness.” By painting portraits, he is better able to recognize and remember them. To create the grid work for Self-Portrait, he takes a photo of his face. Then, he puts a grid on the photo and the canvas. Finally, he selects his palette and paints each cell.

Guidance to Analyze:

1. Read Docent’s responses.     2. Look closely. Go back & forth.     3. Consider Characteristics.

Era:

Postmodern/ The Age of Postmodernist Art. (1970 – present)

Movement:

Photorealistic. Contemporary Photorealist, American. (1960s – present)

Characteristics of Style:

A first-class, format camera is coupled with extreme, meticulous depiction of detail. Photography as inspiration.