|
The
backdrop to the last cover of Freewheelin for 2002 is taken from one
of the last paintings by the American
Abstract Expressionist painter Barnett Newman (1905-
1970). The painting is entitled ‘BE I (Second version)’ and was
painted by Newman in the last year of his life. It is also the last
painting in the Barnett Newman exhibitions that were held at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art between March and July 2002 and the Tate
Modern, London between September 2002 and January 2003.
Newman’s paintings have a distinctive style – they
are usually vast expanses of colour that have a vertical line or ‘zip’
that split the compositions into sections. Those ‘zips’ could
represent all manner of images, from a light giving source to the
separation of man from God to the division of race to the break down
of a relationship or of a mind. As the following extract from the
introduction to the Tate Modern collection suggests however, it is
impossible to properly represent the emotion of these paintings by
reproduction:
‘Newman’s paintings are impossible to grasp from
reproductions. They require us to stand before them, close enough to
experience all their nuances of colour and structure’.
Newman himself often compared the ‘visual
experience of the painting’ to an ‘encounter . . .with a person, a
living being’.
We
encounter three persons who are standing in front of ‘BE I(Second
Version)’. The first is Bob Dylan, actually only the left side of Bob
Dylan, separated as he is by Newman’s zip from the other side of his
Gemini twin. The other two people are from the Monty Python team, one
of whom appears to be pointing straight at you but actually the way he
his holding his forefinger and thumb together may mean that he has
just stood in front of a Barnett Newman painting and has measured the
width of a ‘zip’!
|