Artist Biennial
Allan D'Arcangelo
1930–1998
Biography
Although Allan D’Arcangelo would become known primarily for his images of US highways, complete with road signs and billboards, he made a number of significant paintings of celebrities, including Marilyn Monroe and Jacqueline Kennedy, the latter pictured in Madonna and Child with her toddler daughter. D’Arcangelo worked from a contemporary portrait photograph of the First Lady and Caroline Kennedy to make this graphic take on an age-old religious art-historical subject. Mother and daughter are rendered in bold blocks of unmodulated color, their featureless faces ringed in bright yellow halos that elevate them to the status of contemporary icons and saviors of America. D’Arcangelo highlights the Kennedys’ brand status in his use of the bold style and limited color palette of commercial design and advertising, epitomized in the subjects’ two-tone hair. The image trades on visual legibility: its sitters are recognizable merely by virtue of their signature hair and clothing, and Jackie’s string of pearls. With its graphic style and celebrity subjects, Madonna and Child relates to works by other Pop artists such as Andy Warhol. Like Warhol’s works, this painting points to the more sinister side of celebrity and consumer culture: despite their apparently heavenly status, Jackie and Caroline have been reduced to images to be consumed, devoid of depth, individuality, and voice. The tragic aura of the painting seems particularly poignant given the assassination of President Kennedy just a few months after D'Arcangelo completed this work.
Works in the collection
Madonna and Child
American Landscape #1
American Landscape #3
American Landscape #2
ARTISTS AND WRITERS PROTEST AGAINST THE WAR IN VIET NAM
Dipped
Landscape
Landscape
69
A Modern Super Highway Carried Through the Countryside 1965
Bridge-Barrier 1964
June Moon 1963
Landscape 1966
Landscape 1968
Proposition 1967
Landscape 1969
Exhibitions at the Whitney
- The Whitney’s Collection: Selections from 1900 to 1965 2019-06-28 – 2025-05-01
- An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940–2017 2017-08-18 – 2018-08-27
- Human Interest: Portraits from the Whitney’s Collection 2016-04-02 – 2017-04-02
- America Is Hard to See 2015-05-01 – 2015-09-27
- Sinister Pop 2012-11-15 – 2013-03-31
- 1969 Annual Exhibition: Contemporary American Painting 1969-12-16 – 1970-02-01
- 1967 Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Painting 1967-12-13 – 1968-02-04