Jack Sonenberg
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Jack Sonenberg
American, born Canada, 1925–2012
Like many of his peers, Sonenberg used his art to share his views on the Vietnam War. As part of Angry Arts Week in early 1967, he participated in The Collage of Indignation, a massive collaborative project created by 150 artists and critics over the span of five days protesting the Vietnam War. However, despite using art as an activist tool, Sonenberg's imagery was more abstract in nature.
Sonenberg's use of the collograph—a printing process developed in 1955 that became popular in the 1960s—allowed him to work with surface impressions to expand spatial boundaries. These subtle, textural marks combined with his simple composition and limited color choices demonstrate Sonenberg's interest in the reduced forms of Minimalism, a popular art movement of the period that celebrated the reductive qualities of color and form itself. Although the artist created "Sign No. 1" in the early 1970s, it clearly shows his interest in this movement.
American, born Canada, 1925–2012
Sign No. 1
1971
Object Type:
Print
Dimensions:
21 3/4 in. x 21 1/4 in. (55.25 cm x 53.98 cm)
Medium and Support:
Collograph on paper
Accession Number:
2002.0012.0010
Credit Line:
Gift of Lila and Ralph Franco
Like many of his peers, Sonenberg used his art to share his views on the Vietnam War. As part of Angry Arts Week in early 1967, he participated in The Collage of Indignation, a massive collaborative project created by 150 artists and critics over the span of five days protesting the Vietnam War. However, despite using art as an activist tool, Sonenberg's imagery was more abstract in nature.
Sonenberg's use of the collograph—a printing process developed in 1955 that became popular in the 1960s—allowed him to work with surface impressions to expand spatial boundaries. These subtle, textural marks combined with his simple composition and limited color choices demonstrate Sonenberg's interest in the reduced forms of Minimalism, a popular art movement of the period that celebrated the reductive qualities of color and form itself. Although the artist created "Sign No. 1" in the early 1970s, it clearly shows his interest in this movement.
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