Joe Brainard
Untitled (Brainard), n.d.
ink and gouache on paper
13 x 10 inches
(33 x 25.4 cm)
(Inv. No. 8712)
Joe Brainard
7-Up, 1962
enamel on canvas
25 x 18 inches
(63.5 x 45.7 cm)
(Inv. No. 9896)
Joe Brainard
Self Portrait - January 1963, 1963
graphite and colored pencil on paper
4 3/4 x 3 14 inches
(12.1 x 797.6 cm)
(Inv. No. 9905)
Joe Brainard
Self Portrait, 1962
ink and pastel on board
18 x 12 inches
(45.7 x 30.5 cm)
(Inv. No. 9906)
Joe Brainard & Ted Berrigan
Untitled (Flag), 1962
mixed media collage
12 x 16 inches
(30.5 x 40.6 cm)
(Inv. No. 9907)
Joe Brainard
Untitled, 1962
ink on paper
16 x 22 1/2 inches
signed on recto
(Inv. No. 8721)
Joe Brainard & Ted Berrigan
Untitled (Black Death), c. 1962-63
collage
20 1/4 x 15 1/2 inches
(Inv. No. JT9460)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (assemblage), 1971
mixed media
7 x 5 3/4 inches
(Inv. No. 9891)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Cigarettes), n.d.
mixed media assemblage
13 x 10 inches
unsigned
(Inv. No. 8710)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Tattoo), 1971
graphite and ink on paper
13 5/8 x 10 5/8 inches
(34.6 x 27 cm)
(Inv. No. 9465)
Joe Brainard
Tattooed Torso (Bill & Joe), 1970
pencil and colored pencil on paper
7 1/2 x 5 3/4` inches
(19.1 x 14.6 cm)
(Inv. No. 9897)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Brown Nose), 1975
mixed media collage
7 3/8 x 5 inches
(18.7 x 12.7 cm)
(Inv. No. 9903)
Joe Brainard
I Met You, 1978
mixed meida
4 x 1 1/2 inches
(10.2 x 3.8 cm)
(Inv. No. 9909)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Sigh), n.d.
gouache on paper
4 1/4 x 1 1/2 inches
(Inv. No. 9608)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Self-Portrait), c. 1972
conte crayon on paper
11 3/4 x 9 inches
(29.8 x 22.9 cm)
(Inv. No. 9847)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Greek Bathers), 1978
mixed media on paper
6 1/2 x 4 1/2 inches
(16.5 x 11.4 cm)
(Inv. No. 7353)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Queen for a Day), 1975
collage
13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
(34.3 x 26.7 cm)
(Inv. No. 9546)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Red Pairs), 1972
mixed media collage
13 3/4 x 10 3/4 inches
signed on recto with note
(Inv. No. 8740)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Pansies), 1968
gouache on paper
9 x 7 inches
(22.9 x 17.8 cm)
(Inv. No. 9186)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Pepsi Bottle), ca. 1966-67
gouache on paper
14 x 11 inches
(35.6 x 27.9 cm)
(Inv. No. 9908)
Joe Brainard
Flower Painting, 1966
mixed media collage
13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
(Inv. No. 8751)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Toothbrushes), 1973-74
oil on canvas
12 x 9 inches
(30.5 x 22.9 cm)
(Inv. No. 8708)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Pansies), ca 1970
oil on canvas
10 x 8 inches
(25.4 x 20.3 cm)
(Inv. No. 9037)
Joe Brainard
30 Squares, 1972
mixed media
13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
(34.3 x 26.7 cm)
(Inv. No. 8709)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Orchids), 1972
pencil and ink on paper
9 1/4 x 7 1/2 inches
(23.5 x 19.1 cm)
(Inv. No. 9555)
Joe Brainard
Anna May Wong, undated
mixed media collage
5 3/4 x 3 7/8 inches
(Inv. No. 8727)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (The Avant-Garde), ca 1968
collage
18 x 24 inches
(Inv. No. 9886)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (If Nancy was a Dadaist), n.d.
mixed media collage
3 3/4 x 5 5/8 inches
(Inv. No. 9899)
Joe Brainard
Sailor Suit When I Was Three, 1972
mixed media on paper
13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
(34.3 x 26.7 cm)
(Inv. No. 9850)
Joe Brainard
Tulips and Oranges, c. 1967-68
gouache on paper
24 x 18 inches
(61 x 45.7 cm)
(Inv. No. 9623)
Joe Brainard
Soho at Dusk, 1978
oil on canvas
16 x 12 inches
(Inv. No. 9537)
Joe Brainard
Soho at Night, 1978
oil on canvas
16 x 12 inches
(Inv. No. 9538)
Joe Brainard
Self-Portrait, c. 1978
oil on canvas
16 x 12 inches
(Inv. No. 9539)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Marlboro), c. 1964
assemblage
6 1/2 x 4 1/2 inches
(Inv. No. 9890)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Cigarettes), 1969
graphite, gouache, and mixed media paper collage on paper
7.5 x 5.5 inches
(Inv. No. 8653)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Tareyton), 1967
ink on paper
11 x 8 inches
(Inv. No. 8719)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Lucky Strike), n.d.
mixed media collage
13 x 10 inches
(33 x 25.4 cm)
(Inv. No. 8714)
Joe Brainard
Jasper Johns, 1972
graphite on paper
14 x 10 5/8 inches
(35.6 x 27 cm)
(Inv. No. 9904)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Self-Portrait), 1975
mixed media on paper
13 1/2 x 9 inches
(Inv. No. 9892)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Whippoorwill), 1974
oil on canvas board
20 x 24 inches
(Inv. No. 9898)
Joe Brainard
Untitled, 1975
collage
10 x 8 inches
(25.4 x 20.3 cm)
(Inv. No. 004015)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Open Door), 1972
mixed media on paper
13 1/2 x 10 1/2 inches
(Inv. No. 9849)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Collage), 1975
mixed media
(Inv. No. 9551)
Joe Brainard
Untitled (Tinfoil Window), 1975
collage
8 x 6 inches
(20.3 x 15.2 cm)
(Inv. No. 9558)
Joe Brainard
Untitled, 1971
cut paper
29 x 23 inches
(73.7 x 58.4 cm)
(Inv. No. 9493)
Joe Brainard
Untitled, 1970
paper cut-out
29 x 23 3/4 inches
(73.7 x 60.3 cm)
(Inv. No. 6883)
Tibor de Nagy is pleased to present Joe Brainard - a box of hearts and other works, an exhibition of over 50 works, many never or rarely exhibited before. Among those are Tulips and Oranges (pictured above), a newly discovered large Nancy collage made for the Art News Annual cover in 1968, and the early Pop painting 7-Up. Two miniature works, A Box of Hearts and Little Letters, will be also on view for the first time.
Coinciding with the exhibition is Rizzoli's publication of Joe Brainard: The Art of the Personal by John Yau, a gorgeous compendium of Brainard's work with 225 illustrations, mostly in color, many of them never published before. Yau will be present at the opening to sign copies of the book from 3-6pm on Saturday, October 22nd.
Joe Brainard (1942-1994) grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and moved to New York in 1960. He gained early recognition with his first solo exhibition in 1965 at the Alan Gallery. Over the next decade he exhibited regularly, including serveral shows at Fischbach Gallery and his work was included in numerous museum exhibitions in the United States and abroad. Brainard’s work was the subject of a traveling retrospective curated by Constance Lewallen at the Berkeley Art Museum in 2001. In 2021, The Metropolitan Museum of Art acquired 15 major works through donation and his drawings, collages, assemblages, and paintings are in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, The Morgan Library and many other museums. Tibor de Nagy Gallery has represented the estate of Joe Brainard since 1997.
A
CLEAR
SKY…
THATS
WHAT IS
IMPORTANT
NOW-A-DAYS
IN BOSTON…
WHERE… …
“EVERYONE
OWNS A RAIN-
COAT!” BUT ME. (JOE)
This is text taken from a pencil-on-paper self-portrait by Joe Brainard from January of 1963, sized at 4 ¾ by 3 ¼ inches, featured in both John Yau’s Joe Brainard: The Art of the Personal, and Joe Brainard: a box of hearts and other works at Tibor de Nagy. It’s one of the first works seen upon entering the show.
ME. (JOE).
That parenthetical (JOE) is representative of much of Joe Brainard’s writing, assemblages, paintings, drawings, and miniatures (etc.). He was earnest about being himself on the page, but never assumed that we must necessarily know that self. He never considered himself to have attained stardom, and thought of others first—something much to be noted when discussing the man who wrote I Remember, whose subject was identifiably “himself and everything he touched, saw, or cared about—a world that was simultaneously private and public, personal and anonymous,” in Yau’s words.
Joe Brainard: The Art of the Personal, poet and critic John Yau’s new monograph of the artist and writer, is a love letter from someone who knew Joe to those of us who wish we did—who feel like we must have. John Yau’s 73-page essay is referential, personal, and context-heavy, illustrating and mirroring the nature of Brainard’s work and life, providing a framework for the nearly 150 pages of plates that follow. Throughout his essay, Yau focuses on individual works sparingly, extrapolating key points in the pieces to contextualize the trajectory of Brainard’s life and practice. The book was released alongside a show of Brainard’s works at Tibor de Nagy on the Lower East Side, an early favorite gallery of the Tulsa cohort of the New York School, just eight blocks away from Joe’s first apartment in the city (a storefront on 6th Street that now functions as a dry cleaner’s). The show, Joe Brainard: a box of hearts and other works, was on view from October 22 through December 3, 2022, and included many of the drawings and paintings that are featured in the book, a majority of which have not been exhibited previously.
The art of Joe Brainard is having a moment.
Joe Brainard, who to some is better known as a writer and poet, was perhaps under appreciated as a visual artist. This tide appears to be turning. In October Rizzoli published Joe Brainard: The Art of The Personal, a beautiful monograph about Brainard’s visual art. In the past year, the Metropolitan Museum of Art received a gift of 16 important works by Brainard, making the Met the largest public collection holder of Brainard’s artwork, with 42 pieces. Word on the street is that an exhibition from their collection of Brainard works is on the drawing board. In November three works on paper by Brainard came up for auction at Sotheby’s New York. The first, a mixed-media collage, with an estimate of $5,000–$7,000, achieved a winning bid of $44,100. Then two drawings, both with estimates of $2,000–$3,000, sold for $44,100 and $94,500, respectively.
If you were in New York City this fall, you also would have had a chance to see a lovely jewel box of an exhibition of Brainard’s work at Tibor de Nagy Gallery. The exhibition, called “Joe Brainard: a box of hearts and other works,” consisted of 68 artworks. As someone familiar with Brainard's work would expect, the items ranged from not too large to very small. The largest pieces in the show were two untitled cut-paper works, one 29 x 23 inches, and the other, 29 x 23 ¾ inches. In each, paper is delicately cut into botanical silhouettes, and then the silhouettes are layered into a frame to create something that is at once a drawing and, in a way, a sculpture. The light in the room as well as the viewer’s movement around the pieces create subtle shadows and motion. These works are vague monochromes when viewed in passing or from afar. But in his poem, “Out in the Hamptons,” Brainard puts things this way:
By Deborah Solomon
Nov. 16, 2022
Joe Brainard sought to take up as little space as possible. He specialized in small-scale works — collages, drawings, and occasional paintings that relate more to the proportions of a writer’s desk than an artist’s looming studio. “There is something I lack as a painter that de Kooning and Alex Katz have,” he jotted in his diary in 1967. “I wish I had that. I’d tell you what it was except that I don’t know.”
However much he may have lamented his perceived shortcomings, Brainard was ahead of his time in acknowledging his feelings of marginalization. Unable or unwilling to advance the grand tradition of painting, he created a major body of work by questioning the prevalent belief that artists should have an instantly recognizable, money-in-the-bank style. And he understood how cheapo things (comic books, cigarette packaging, gift tags, restaurant receipts, etc.) can be an expression of authentic emotion.
“Joe Brainard: A Box of Hearts and Other Works,” a fascinating and substantial survey show at the Tibor de Nagy Gallery, on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, arrives right on time. It coincides with the publication of a new monograph on the artist by the critic John Yau, as well as with the much-praised Alex Katz retrospective at the Guggenheim Museum, in which Brainard happens to materialize as an unmistakable portrait subject. There he stands on the Guggenheim ramps, in two painted sculptures from 1966, a rangy, slightly nerdy young man with curly brown hair, tortoiseshell glasses and an oversized shirt collar jutting from his V-neck sweater.