• Search Icon
  • Toggle Menu
  • Close Menu

The Art

Search for information about all the works of art and craft we have donated to museums

Standing Figure (2017)

Claudette Elaine Johnson

acrylic, pastel, and masking tape on paper

Rugby Art Gallery & Museum

Standing Figure (2017)

© Claudette Johnson Courtesy of the artist and Hollybush Gardens. Photo Andy Keate

Details

Materials:

Acrylic, Tape, Pastel

Dimensions:

159 x 132 (framed) cm

Accession Number:

RC218

Credit:

Presented by the Contemporary Art Society with the support of Rugby Art Gallery & Museum, 2017/18

Ownership history:

Purchased from Hollybush Gardens, London by the Contemporary Art Society, 14 December 2017; presented to Rugby Art Gallery & Museum, 8 February 2018

Subject:

Black (presence)
Claudette Johnson is known for depicting larger than life images of black protagonists that occupy the entire space of the painting. In her work, Johnson attempts to counter negative representations of black women and men, and to fight their lack of visibility. She also strives to create a range of representations of the black body that is free from or resists objectification. Joining the newly formed BLK Art Group in 1981, Johnson was part of a movement of artists who aimed to challenge their shared invisibility in the art world, leading ten female artists of of African, Caribbean and Asian ancestry, to exhibit in the 1985 exhibition The Thin Black Line at the ICA.

In Standing Figure, she uses the modest materials of pastel on paper to capture the strong standing pose of the figure. The young woman never meets our gaze, nor does she give the impression that she is shy. Although Johnson’s works are often defined as ‘portraits’, she has suggested that her drawings sit outside of portraiture as the figures inhabit an undefined space that makes no reference to the sitter’s personal history or location. She uses her work to investigate her interest in the black figure, a place where race, gender and belonging collide.

In recent years Rugby Art Gallery and Museum’s acquisitions have been selected to broaden the range of mediums and subject matter represented in the gallery’s collection, connecting it with the temporary exhibition programme and growing audiences. Acquiring a new work by Claudette Johnson in early 2018 is a key decision linked to a series of temporary exhibitions that focus on people, communities and their stories.

This image may be shared and re-used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (CC BY-NC-ND). Any further use will need to be cleared directly with the rights holder.

Read our copyright policy for more information.

Artworks by Claudette Elaine Johnson

Browse more relevant artworks.

You Might Also Like