Champaign
Jackson, Billy Morrow
1984
Artwork Information
-
Title:
Champaign
-
Artist:
Jackson, Billy Morrow
-
Artist Bio:
American, 1926–2006
-
Date:
1984
-
Medium:
Oil on Masonite
-
Dimensions:
23 3/4 x 31 3/4 inches
-
Credit Line:
Wichita Art Museum, Gift of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, Hassam and Speicher Purchase Fund
-
Object Number:
1986.85
-
Display:
Not Currently on Display
About the Artwork
This painting is an oil on Masonite titled Champaign and executed in October 1984, by the contemporary American realist, Billy Morrow Jackson. The work offers a familiar view of the American prairie landscape. At a glance the painting evokes the appropriate physical sensations of the early autumn season depicted and of a variety of natural textures shown, as for example the wood siding of the red barns, the ruts in the muddy roadway, the crispy white frost that has settled on the foreground weeds and on the rooftops, and the yellowing tree leaves of early fall. The relatively low horizon is accompanied by a vast area of open and all-embracing colored sky with tonal gradations ranging from a radiant yellow-orange glow at the right of the composition to a delicate and cool pale blue at the left.
What is so especially fascinating about this painting is that we experience many surprises as we explore the scene presented. For, while the artist has quite obviously demonstrated an interest in methodically furnishing a meticulously accurate rendering of a prairie landscape, his even greater concern has been in focusing attention on the component details so harmoniously interlocked in reality, yet more often than not totally overlooked as we casually cast our eyes across the world of actual reality in which we live.
It is in pursuing this approach in painting that the artist intensifies our vision by making us more keenly aware of the minutiae of nature and at the same time promptly reminding us of the immensity of creation and its many and varying dimensions.