
<p>In the early 1960s, as a young student in New York, Jack Whitten established ties with an older generation of black artists that included Romare Bearden and Jacob Lawrence, as well as with leading Abstract Expressionists such as Willem de Kooning, Ad Reinhardt, and Franz Kline. During the second half of the decade, Whitten began working toward an entirely unique relationship to painting that he described in this way: “About 1965 I wrote on my studio wall one day, the image is photographic; I must photograph my thoughts.” By 1970 the artist had eliminated both expressive color and figuration from his work, launching a ten-year series of paintings that capture, like a camera, the often chance-based immediacies of his dynamic studio process.</p> <p><em>Khee II</em> exhibits all the hallmarks of Whitten’s mature process-derived paintings. As with other works from this period, the artist placed a variety of flat, shaped objects beneath the canvas. After preparing the surface with gesso, he layered it with thin sheets of colored Japanese rice paper. The rice paper dissolved, leaving behind pure pigment. Whitten then pulled a rake or other notched tool—which he calls a “developer,” in obvious reference to a photographer’s chemicals—across the work’s surface. This served both to impress the shapes from below, effectively embossing the canvas, and to disperse color on top of it. The result is a series of ghostlike images and alternating rows of color that vibrate with subtle luminosity. This is a glowing evocative abstract painting that is also a layer-by-layer document of its own making.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1978
- Medium
- Acrylic on canvas
- Dimensions
- 182.9 × 213.4 cm (72 × 84 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Jack Whitten
Artist

Painting
Critically admired for his relentless exploration into the process and materiality of painting, Jack Whitten’s contribution to the medium’s historic development is widely recognized. Born in Alabama in 1939 to a seamstress and a coal-worker, Whitten initially planned to become an army doctor, leading him to enroll at the Tuskegee Institute. During this time, Whitten became inspired by George Washington Carver, a Renaissance man, and consequently transferred to the Southern University in Baton Rouge to study art. Whitten eventually settled in New York City in 1960 where he enrolled at the Cooper Union, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in fine art in 1964.
Full artist profile →More
More by Jack Whitten
Atopolis: For Édouard Glissant
2014 · Acrylic on canvas, 8 panels
Radiator Drawing #1
2010 · Graphite on paper
Untitled
1977 · Collage of cut and pasted photocopied papers, with traces of incising, over white-out and graphite, on cream wove paper
Liquid Space I
1976 · Acrylic slip on paper
Kappa I
1976 · Acrylic on canvas
Broken Spaces #1
1974 · Toner on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Jack Whitten
- Year
- 1978
- Medium
- Acrylic on canvas
- Dimensions
- 182.9 × 213.4 cm (72 × 84 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1978-048864
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





