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Morning Awning
Morning Awning
Morning Awning

Morning Awning

Maker (American, 1939 - 2021)
Date1 March 1966
MediumBall-point pen and felt tip marker on paper
DimensionsSheet: 13 7/8 x 10 7/8 in. (35.2 x 27.6 cm)
Credit LineGift of Dennis Adrian in honor of Don Baum
Object number2001.509
Object TypeDrawings
On View
Not on view
Karl Wirsum’s work comes out of his fascination with indigenous art from Mesoamerica and the Southwestern United States, and comic strips and toys, combined with an engagement with the city of Chicago itself—its plethora of urban signage, sounds of rhythm and blues, and eccentric characters. This 1966 drawing is unusual for Wirsum in its lack of bilateral symmetry and jagged linework, but it is characteristic in his use of bold, flat colors in the era of psychedelic record album covers and other commercial art, and his emphasis on two-dimensional design and formal repetition through patterning devices. (See Smart Museum 2001.506-512, 2007.171.)
In the late 1960s and early 1970s Wirsum exhibited with other emerging young artists in antic exhibitions at the Hyde Park Art Center, such as Jim Nutt and Art Green in the Hairy Who shows, and Ed Paschke in Marriage Chicago Style (1970) and Chicago Antigua (1971). He shares with them an affinity for outlandish and confrontational figuration and word play. (See 2001.343, 2001.632 and 1978.169-171.) Likewise, his treatment of the figure’s nose is striking in its resemblance to Jim Nutt’s later imaginary portraits in which Nutt obsessively revisits this distinctive facial feature.
Flat Foot
Karl Wirsum
19 October 1965
Maid in America
Karl Wirsum
3 November 1967
Untitled
Karl Wirsum
15 December 1966
Untitled
Karl Wirsum
14 December 1965
Untitled (kite woman)
Karl Wirsum
9 December 1965
Kite Lady
Karl Wirsum
10 December 1965
Untitled (two women)
Karl Wirsum
28 July 1962