The Easel

3rd March 2026

Jasper Johns: between the clock and the bed

An interview with an obvious commercial slant, but interesting, nonetheless. When Johns started making “crosshatch” paintings in 1972, they were abruptly different from his previous work. These “fraught and fidgety” patterns bore no relation to pop art but neither did they have the emotional drama of artists such as Pollock and Rothko. Some speculated that he was referencing Picasso and Munch. Mostly though, they showed that Johns “didn’t just know how to paint, he knew how to make a painting do more.”

24th February 2026

Yoko Ono’s Art Is an Exercise in Hope

Ono is one of the world’s “most generous artists,” says the writer, because she incorporates the viewer into her work. By the mid 1960’s she was well known in the art avant garde through works such as Cut Piece (1964) where audiences snipped pieces from her dress. Compared to her work after meeting John Lennon, the early work seems “more radical … collaboration diminished [her] female brazenness”. Says one writer “That tension—between doing and thinking—is where Ono’s art lives.”

The Worst Show of 2025

When Johnson’s show opened at the Guggenheim, a critic wondered whether his work was “activism or just décor”. Those doubts persist. Johnson is “just okay” as an artist – so how did he get this prestigious retrospective? Perhaps it’s because his “post-black” work is “citation heavy”, meaning that evaluation of his art is deflected into discussions of “biography and identity”. Palm trees have been hung in the museum’s central void, perhaps “a way to nervously fill that famous space, as if the art itself isn’t enough”.

How Kaari Upson turned her world upside down

About to open in Germany, Upson’s retrospective celebrates a promising career cut short by early death. She came to prominence with her “Larry” series inspired by exploring the abandoned house of an unknown neighbour. It’s a commentary on masculinity but, more importantly, an example of how her art blurs boundaries. She blurs individual identities, but also the boundary between fact versus fiction, between what is public versus private. This retrospective “will surely not be her last.”.

Between Worlds: Visitors to 37-08 Utopia Parkway

Cornell’s studio has been re-created in a Paris gallery, bringing many reminiscences of this unusual artist. He lived in suburban New York and dreamed of travelling to Paris. His collages, box assemblages and films were made with materials from bric-a-brac stores. Inspired by surrealism his boxes are exercises in “urban reverie”. Despite friendships with many notable artists, he was a loner – or as a friend called him, a monk. Says a curator, Cornell was “born on the wrong continent at the wrong time”.