Current:Home > reviewsMr. Whiskers is ready for his close-up: When an artist's pet is also their muse -WealthRoots Academy
Mr. Whiskers is ready for his close-up: When an artist's pet is also their muse
View
Date:2025-04-15 16:46:01
At the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), there's a captivating self-portrait of the artist Joan Brown hugging Donald, her resplendent tabby cat.
"She is holding onto Donald so tightly," SFMOMA associate curator of painting and sculpture Nancy Lim said recently while touring the museum's current major retrospective of the late San Francisco artist. "It's not just an embrace. It's something more."
Every day, millions of people around the world post pictures and videos of their pets online. According to a recent OnePoll survey, one in four people in the U.S. have social media accounts for their furry friends. But the tradition of creating and sharing such images goes back about 300 years in painting and sculpture.
Brown painted dozens of pictures of her pets between the 1960s and '80s. The cats and dogs in her works seem fully-present, self-aware and all-knowing; in Joan + Donald (1982), the feline has an especially frank look in his big, yellow eyes.
"Joan considered him very wise," said Lim. "Someone who could carry on human conversation, if he could."
Donald was more than a close companion to Brown. Lim said he was also a business asset.
"She decided to list him as an income deduction, because he was a live-in model," Lim said.
The IRS audited the artist for deducting cat food and vet bills on her tax return, but Brown successfully argued her case. And Lim said her cat thereafter earned himself a nickname.
"Her friends called him 'Donald the Deductible,' " she said.
Part of an artist's daily life
Sahar Khoury said she's impressed with Joan Brown's chutzpah.
"I'm so scared of the IRS," the Oakland-based artist said. "I won't even claim my gas."
Khoury toured the Joan Brown exhibition with her service animal Esther, an adorable, curly-haired, floppy-eared, white mutt.
"She's currently around 14 and travels with me everywhere I go," Khoury said. "She unwillingly has become a part of my work."
Over the years, Khoury has crafted many sculptures featuring her pets, including a fantastical, circus-style pyramid of 15 glazed ceramic Esthers perching on each others' backs. Khoury said that just like Joan Brown, her pets — she also has a cat/artist's model named Lola — are part of her everyday landscape.
"You're just archiving your daily life," Khoury said. "And I can't imagine not having the animals be a part of that."
A modern Western tradition
The history of artists drawing inspiration from non-human animals goes back to the beginning of the history of art.
"But making portraits of pets really is a more modern phenomenon and largely in the Western world," said Alan Braddock, a professor at the College of William and Mary in Virginia who studies depictions of animals in art.
Braddock said the tradition is rooted in Western philosophical notions of human individualism — which lead to the the idea that pets are fully-realized beings rather than just "dumb animals."
One of the earliest examples is the British satirical artist William Hogarth's 1745 self-portrait titled The Painter and his Pug. In the somber-toned painting, the artists poses formally in the background, while the pug — named Trump — stands up front with his tongue sticking out at the viewer.
"Hogarth loved his dog, and saw the dog as a kind of emblem of his own pugnaciousness as an artist," Braddock said.
Other artists followed suit. Pablo Picasso made studies of Lump, an adored dachshund; Frida Kahlo's catalogue is packed with self-portraits featuring her pet monkeys and parrots.
"She admired animals' creativity and saw it as a reflection of her own," Braddock said of the famed 20th century Mexican artist.
Artists who portray other people's pets
Some artists who paint other people's pets feel this same sense of affinity.
Jesse Freidin worked as a professional dog photographer for 15 years, and is perhaps best known for a series of portraits he made in 2010 of assorted canines dressed up as Lady Gaga — The Doggie Gaga Project.
"I wasn't just photographing dogs," Freidin said. "I was photographing relationships and studying people."
Freidin said the art he makes with dogs aims to get at something deeper than cuteness, though the Doggie Gagas are admittedly very cute.
"I don't want to put myself in front of the camera," Freidin said. "But I do want to articulate something about my human condition and experience. An animal becomes this exterior representation. And it's powerful."
Joan Brown runs at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art through March 12, 2023. It then goes on to the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pa. (May 27–Sep. 24, 2023) and the Orange County Museum of Art, Costa Mesa, Calif. (Feb. 7–May 1, 2024).
Audio and digital stories edited by Jennifer Vanasco. Audio produced by Isabella Gomez-Sarmiento. Digital produced by Beth Novey.
veryGood! (6387)
Related
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Biden Administration Stops Short of Electric Vehicle Mandates for Trucks
- The Fate of Protected Wetlands Are At Stake in the Supreme Court’s First Case of the Term
- Billions in USDA Conservation Funding Went to Farmers for Programs that Were Not ‘Climate-Smart,’ a New Study Finds
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Inside Clean Energy: Here’s How Compressed Air Can Provide Long-Duration Energy Storage
- Supreme Court looks at whether Medicare and Medicaid were overbilled under fraud law
- Championing Its Heritage, Canada Inches Toward Its Goal of Planting 2 Billion Trees
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Judge prepares for start of Dominion v. Fox trial amid settlement talks
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- California Considers ‘Carbon Farming’ As a Potential Climate Solution. Ardent Proponents, and Skeptics, Abound
- Inside Clean Energy: Batteries Got Cheaper in 2021. So How Close Are We to EVs That Cost Less than Gasoline Vehicles?
- New Federal Anti-SLAPP Legislation Would Protect Activists and Whistleblowers From Abusive Lawsuits
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Step up Your Fashion With the Top 17 Trending Amazon Styles Right Now
- Inside Clean Energy: Who’s Ahead in the Race for Offshore Wind Jobs in the US?
- Tucker Carlson Built An Audience For Conspiracies At Fox. Where Does It Go Now?
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Gwyneth Paltrow Poses Topless in Poolside Selfie With Husband Brad Falchuk
Environmentalists in Chile Are Hoping to Replace the Country’s Pinochet-Era Legal Framework With an ‘Ecological Constitution’
Netflix’s Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo Movie Reveals Fiery New Details
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Warming Trends: Laughing About Climate Change, Fighting With Water and Investigating the Health Impacts of Fracking
Inside the Murder Case Against a Utah Mom Who Wrote a Book on Grief After Her Husband's Sudden Death
There's No Crying Over These Secrets About A League of Their Own