Skip to content

Images

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston

Description

Trenton Doyle Hancock responds to the provocative images of twentieth-century Jewish painter Philip Guston in the exhibition Draw Them In, Paint Them Out: Trenton Doyle Hancock Confronts Philip Guston, on view at the Jewish Museum from November 8, 2024, through March 30, 2025. In bringing together these two trailblazing artists from different generations, this exhibition catalog situates Guston’s and Hancock’s works in their social and political contexts and explores the way that art, activism, and humor can deepen our understanding of the Black and Jewish experiences in the United States. The book also features Hancock in conversation with curator Valerie Cassel Oliver and award-winning author and cartoonist Art Spiegelman.

A defining figure of the New York School, Philip Guston (1913–1980) frequently alluded to racism, antisemitism, and fascism in his work. In the 1960s and 1970s, Guston, who often grappled with his Jewish identity and assimilation into American culture, controversially portrayed himself as a cartoonish Klansman to deflate the power of the Klan’s hateful symbolism, as well as to acknowledge his own complicity in white supremacy.
 
Trenton Doyle Hancock (b. 1974) is a leading contemporary artist who has looked to Guston as a source of inspiration for nearly three decades. In 2014 Hancock created a series of drawings that interweaves Guston’s biography, Hancock’s family history, and the history of lynching in Hancock’s hometown, and introduces Hancock’s avatar, a Black superhero named Torpedoboy who confronts Guston’s hooded alter ego.
  
Published in association with the Jewish Museum, New York
160 Pages
8.25 x 11.00 in
129 illustrations
Hardcover
9780300278200

Back To Top