Popular Culture Review Vol. 11, No. 2, Summer 2000 | Page 57

The Critical Reception of Painted Bronze by Jasper Johns: Art Posing as Product As a Pop artist, Jasper Johns has produced art that has accommodated all types of media, including sculpture, and is inclusive, relying upon extra-artistic sources taken from popular culture (Alloway 119). At the same time his art can be assessed as abstract and distinct from low art. Johns’ work has been celebrated both for its critical content related to popular culture and for its formal innovations distinct from subject matter. The opposing forces of the avant-garde approach with appropriation from mass culture (following a process discussed by Walter Benjamin) and self-referential modernist practice (exemplified by the criticism of Clement Greenberg), in which formalism dominates as a concern, can be seen as a dialectic for Johns. It must be viewed within the context of consumer society where art poses as a product marketed in a commercialized art gallery system that professes to assess value in tenns of the uniqueness of a work of art (Crow 215-16; Baudrillard 52). The critical reception of Johns’ early Pop art object Painted Bronze: Ballantine Ale Cans (figure 1), a sculpture painted to resemble a consumer product, proves the difficulties in trying to reconcile high art with mass culture'. For critics it was expedient to avoid the question of originality — an issue raised by the appropriation of an image from popular culture — by emphasizing the high prices the sculpture commanded in the flourishing art market. A study of the criticism of Painted Bronze will illustrate the way in which the early commerical success of the sculpture was used for over four decades to show that the work had value as formally significant modernist art. In 1964 Johns recalled that he made Painted Bronze to resemble ale cans in order to test his dealer Leo Castelli: I heard a story about Willem de Kooning [that] he was annoyed with my dealer Leo Castelli, for some reason, and said something like, ‘That son of a bitch; you could give him two beer cans and he could sell them. 1 heard this and thought, What a sculpture—two beer cans. It seemed to me to fit in perfectly with what 1 was doing, so 1did them and Leo sold them (qtd. in Swenson 40-43). The sculpture was purchased by Robert Scull for $960 and was later auctioned in