Frame, Peter G. Thompson

Artwork Overview

1939–2025
Frame, 2014
Where object was made: Lawrence, Kansas, United States
Material/technique: inkjet print
Dimensions:
Image Dimensions Height/Width (Height x Width): 32 1/4 x 20 in
Frame Dimensions (Height x Width x Depth): 36 1/2 x 24 1/4 x 1 in
Weight (Weight): 8 lbs
Credit line: Museum purchase: Anonymous gift and Peter T. Bohan Art Acquisition Fund
Accession number: 2015.0150
Not on display

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Images

Label texts

Peter Thompson’s early works conformed to the abstract tendencies of mid-century modernism exemplified by his Yale art school teachers, Al Held and Jack Tworkow. “I’m a ‘50s kind of guy,” he once remarked with a laugh. A longtime member of the KU faculty who served as chair of the Department of Painting and Sculpture and later Dean of Fine Arts, Thompson helped devise the curriculum that shaped several generations of creative Jayhawks. His own creative work is seen in the stained glass windows and organ frame in the Bales Recital Hall, and in work on view in the lobby of the Lied Center, a major campus addition whose planning and construction he oversaw.
In 1999, upon his retirement from administration, colleagues presented him with a special gift, a digital camera. With that the creative life of the painter and draftsman was transformed. The ‘50s guy became a 21st-century one. Although working with a medium new to him, Thompson quickly showed the persistence of a fine compositional sense and a reverence for abstract design that had distinguished his earlier work. Frame is part of a series of photographs closely focused on commonplace objects found in a typical American household, like this metal picture frame. But, as shown here, Thompson could capture his subjects in such a manner as to make them nearly—or completely—abstract, at least momentarily disorienting the viewer with a radically simple design in sharp black and white. CCE

Exhibitions

Charles C. Eldredge, curator
2018
Cassandra Mesick Braun, curator
2021
Cassandra Mesick Braun, curator
2021