Self-Portrait
2000
Chuck Close has been using his own image as a subject for his work since he made his breakthrough painting Big Self-Portrait in 1967-68. For three decades, he pursued the subject matter of "heads" (his term for these portraits) of himself and his artist friends. Starting with realistic, airbrushed, black-and-white paintings, he moved on to color. Close then began dividing the image into a grid and experimenting with making the figure-based works more abstract. Instead of conforming to the squares he now plays with a variety of organic or lyrical shapes. From a distance, these shapes converge to form a realistic face; up close they dissolve into an intricate, shimmering, abstract pattern.
120 color silkscreen
65 1/2 x 54 1/8 in. (166.4 x 137.5 cm)
Gift of Chuck Close in honor of Jon and Mary Shirley
2001.30