One of my latest obsessions…..

Ex. 4-Trinity’s Trine
Jess (American, 1923-2004)
1964. Oil on canvas over wood, 45 7/8 x 48  1/8” (116.5 x 122.3 cm). Purchased with the aid of funds from the  National Endowment for the Arts and an anonymous donor. © 2010 Jess /  Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Stichting Beeldrecht, the  Netherlands

This painting of laboratory apparatus is based on an engraving, affixed  to the back of the canvas, that originally appeared in an 1887 issue of Scientific  American magazine. Jess transformed the original through the almost  compulsive application of up to nine layers of paint on top of a pencil  drawing, the lines of which are still visibly incised. The artist  sought not to create a photographic duplicate of the original but to  evoke its “sensibility”” He explained, “I’m translating that image out  of the nineteenth century into my time, using what knowledge I do have,  which is not enough.” Before becoming an artist Jess was a chemist with  the United States Army Corps of Engineers and played a small role in the  Manhattan Project, developing the first atom bomb. The work’s title may  allude to the first nuclear test, in 1945, code named Trinity.



424.1974

One of my latest obsessions…..

Ex. 4-Trinity’s Trine

Jess (American, 1923-2004)

1964. Oil on canvas over wood, 45 7/8 x 48 1/8” (116.5 x 122.3 cm). Purchased with the aid of funds from the National Endowment for the Arts and an anonymous donor. © 2010 Jess / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Stichting Beeldrecht, the Netherlands

This painting of laboratory apparatus is based on an engraving, affixed to the back of the canvas, that originally appeared in an 1887 issue of Scientific American magazine. Jess transformed the original through the almost compulsive application of up to nine layers of paint on top of a pencil drawing, the lines of which are still visibly incised. The artist sought not to create a photographic duplicate of the original but to evoke its “sensibility”” He explained, “I’m translating that image out of the nineteenth century into my time, using what knowledge I do have, which is not enough.” Before becoming an artist Jess was a chemist with the United States Army Corps of Engineers and played a small role in the Manhattan Project, developing the first atom bomb. The work’s title may allude to the first nuclear test, in 1945, code named Trinity.

424.1974