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  1. Target. 1961. In the mid-1950s Jasper Johns was searching for a way to move beyond Abstract Expressionism. He took the radical step of destroying his previous work and began painting a set of motifs that included numbers, the American flag, and the alphabet.

  2. 30 de oct. de 2017 · Estados Unidos, 1954. Pop-Art. Título original: Museo: Técnica: Escrito por: ¿Porqué pintar una bandera? ¿Y porqué tiene valor artístico esto…? Según Johns una bandera es algo cotidiano y reconocible: la bandera estadounidense es algo que “la mente ya sabe”.

  3. Artwork Details. Overview. Provenance. Exhibition History. Title: Target. Artist: Jasper Johns (American, born Augusta, Georgia, 1930) Publisher: Gemini G.E.L. Publisher: Museum of Modern Art, New York. Date: 1971. Medium: Offset lithograph with collage, in white plastic book case with the exhibition catalogue "Technics And Creativity"

  4. Title: Target. Artist: Jasper Johns (American, born Augusta, Georgia, 1930) Printer: Robert Blackburn (American, Summit, New Jersey 1920–2003 New York) Publisher: Universal Limited Art Editions. Date: 1960. Medium: Lithograph. Dimensions: sheet: 22 1/2 x 17 1/2 in. (57.2 x 44.5 cm) Classification: Prints. Credit Line: Florence and Joseph ...

  5. 30 de ene. de 2022 · Jasper Johns (Allendale, Carolina del Sur 1930) en 1952 se instala en Nueva York y se consagra al dibujo y a la pintura. Dos años más tarde, destruye toda su producción y comienza la serie Banderas (Flags) por la que se dará a conocer. En la obra de Johns también tiene un papel fundamental la inclusión de objetos y utensilios cotidianos ...

  6. Flag is an encaustic painting by the American artist Jasper Johns. It was created in 1954-1955, when Johns was 24, two years after he was discharged from the U.S. Army. This painting was the first of many works that Johns made, as he said, that were inspired by a dream of the U.S. flag in 1954.

  7. Johns went on to use encaustic to render familiar formsflags, targets, numbers, letters, and a map of the United States—time and again throughout his career. Flag constitutes both a thing (a flag) and its representation (a painting of a flag).