Jackson the Ripper #52

Sale Price:$77.77 Original Price:$109.99
sale

Think of Jackson Pollock, and you immediately think of his iconic white T-shirt, dripping with paint splatter. Unbeknownst to most art historians, when he was done with a day of drip painting, Jackson would whip off his shirt and rip it to shreds, saving the scraps in a plastic bag. After he died, his wife, Lee Krasner, gave the colorful fragments, now in a dozen bags, to a family friend, who stored them in the back of a closet in his apartment in the West Village of Manhattan, an apartment that I would move into some 40 years later, where I discovered these essential relics of art history. After careful assembly of these near-holy objects, I present them now to you, as Jackson the Ripper.

Artist: Bryant Rousseau

Acrylic paint, white cotton and staples on 11” x 8” heavy paper; signed . Matted and framed in 14” x 11” wooden frame.

To view the full, uncropped image, right click and open image in new tab.

Add To Cart

Think of Jackson Pollock, and you immediately think of his iconic white T-shirt, dripping with paint splatter. Unbeknownst to most art historians, when he was done with a day of drip painting, Jackson would whip off his shirt and rip it to shreds, saving the scraps in a plastic bag. After he died, his wife, Lee Krasner, gave the colorful fragments, now in a dozen bags, to a family friend, who stored them in the back of a closet in his apartment in the West Village of Manhattan, an apartment that I would move into some 40 years later, where I discovered these essential relics of art history. After careful assembly of these near-holy objects, I present them now to you, as Jackson the Ripper.

Artist: Bryant Rousseau

Acrylic paint, white cotton and staples on 11” x 8” heavy paper; signed . Matted and framed in 14” x 11” wooden frame.

To view the full, uncropped image, right click and open image in new tab.

(Note to FBI Art Crime Squad: This background story is a work of fiction.)