Duane Hanson
Duane Hanson
Duane Hanson
Duane Hanson
Duane Hanson
Villa-Paloma
Duane Hanson
Self Portrait with Model
Duane Hanson
1925 in Alexandria, Minnesota
1996 Boca Raton, Florida
BIOGRAPHY
The American sculptor Duane Hanson (1925-1996)
was one of the leading sculptors working
in a superrealist, or Verist, style. His
work is highly illusionistic, but also has
a social content. While his early works dealt
with physical violence or social issues,
his later work seems to portray passive,
isolated figures as victims of society and
negative values.
Duane Hanson was born January 17, 1925, in
Alexandria, Minnesota. After attendance at
Luther College and the University of Washington,
he graduated from Macalaster College in 1946.
Following a period teaching high school art,
he received a Master of Fine Arts degree
from the Cranbrook Academy in 1951.
Around 1966 Hanson began making figural casts
using fiberglass and vinyl. Works that first
brought him notice were of figures grouped
in tableaux, usually of brutal and violent
subjects, somewhat similar to the work of
Edward Keinholz. Hanson's Abortion (1966)
was inspired by the horrors of a backroom
procedure; Accident (1967) showed a motorcycle
crash; and Race Riot (1969-1971) included
among its seven figures a white policeman
terrorizing a African American man as well
as a African American rioter attacking the
policeman. Other works which dealt with physical
violence or other explosive social issues
of the 1960s were Riot (1967), Football Players
(1969), and Vietnam Scene (1969). These works,
cast from actual people, were made of fiberglass
reinforced with fiber resin, then painted
to make the revealed skin look realistic
with veins and blemishes. Hanson then clothed
the figures with garments from second-hand
clothing stores and then theatrically arranged
the action. Clearly these works contained
strong social comment and can be seen as
modern parallels to the concerns of 19th-century
French Realists such as Honore Daumier and
Jean Francois Millet, artists Hanson admired.
Around 1970 Hanson abandoned such gut-wrenching
subjects for more subtle though no less vivid
ones. In that year he made the Supermarket
Shopper, Hardhat, and Tourists; Woman Eating
was completed in 1971. These were also life-sized,
clothed, fiberglass figures. Unlike the earlier
works, however, these were single or paired
figures, not overtly in a violent activity.
Furthermore, whereas the earlier works tended
to be more contained spatially, the later
figures had no boundaries from the viewer.
They quite literally inhabited the viewer's
space-with amusing results at times, as in
the cases of Reading Man (1977) or the Photographer
(1978). Although detractors may liken his
work to figures in a wax museum, the content
of his sculptures is more complex and expressive
than that normally found in waxworks.
The momentary confusion that Hanson's sculptures
were real people sometimes shocked the viewer
and put too much attention on the technique,
although Hanson argued that the technique
was a means to an end. That end is an intense
look at less exalted aspects of the world
around the viewer. Couple with Shopping Bags
(1976) shows two over-weight people, wearing
mismatched polyester clothes, carrying full
bags. The woman's hairdo is complicated and
her nails are painted. These certainly are
not "beautiful" human figures in
the traditional artistic sense, but they
are without question typical of how many
"average" middle-or lower-class
Americans looked in the 1970s. Although for
most sophisticated art viewers a work such
as Couple with Shopping Bags has a pointed
humor to it, poking fun at the poor taste
so many Americans show in their dress and
grooming, these works also have a more somber
quality. The particularities make the figures
vivid archetypes of American consumers and
remind viewers that all people possess some
unusual characteristics.
Individual works are made even more realistic
because of the eccentricities Hanson chose
to show, and his output may be seen as paying
homage to common humanity. Queenie (1980)
shows a dignified African American cleaning
lady pushing a cart filled with mops, buckets,
and cleaning compounds. Hanson, as is typical,
searched for the right model, so that the
figure is both distinctive but "average."
This work, Hardhat (1971), and Delivery Man
(1980) are especially good examples of Hanson's
sympathy with workers, whose loss of independence
to societal and governmental pressures is
captured in their faces, postures, and clothing.
Other examples of Hanson's work include The
Jogger (1983-84), Camper (1987), and Salesman
(1992).
Like his contemporary John de Andrea, Hanson's
work is highly illusionistic, in the tradition
of trompe d'oeil painting and sculpture.
However, unlike Andrea, who stressed pose
and attitude in his real-looking nude figures,
or George Segal, who relied on surface expressiveness
in his cast figures, Hanson placed much emphasis
on paraphernalia and clothing and on body
types. His work of the 1960s clearly had
a social content, and, though it is more
subtle, this interest in content continued
in the work of the 1970s and 1980s. American
greed, materialism, tastelessness, and narrow-mindedness
seem to be a part of the later work. The
characters within the art are passive, isolated
beings, presented as victims of American
society and negative values as much as the
cause of them. In the 1990s Hanson created
figures that challenged people's ideas about
prejudice and social class.
Hanson experienced both criticism and praise
during his lifetime. In addition to receiving
numerous awards, Duane Hanson was honored
with the proclamation of Duane Hanson day,
by Broward County Florida in 1987, and in
1992 he was inducted into the Florida Hall
of Fame.
Encountering a Hanson piece in a museum can
be a shock because of the high degree of
illusionism. That shock is in part due to
the artist's impressive technique, but is
also based on the recognition that the figure
accurately mirrors us and the society of
which we are a part. It reflects and informs.
As Hanson once said, "Realism is best
suited to convey the frightening idiosyncrasies
of our time" (Art News, March 1996).
Hanson was 70 when he died in Boca Raton,
Florida, on January 6, 1996, of non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma.
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