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View: In gallery
Bockscar
Matthew Day Jackson (American, born in 1974)
2010
Medium/Technique
Burned wood and formica on wood panel
Dimensions
96 x 107 inches (243.8 x 271.8 cm)
Credit Line
Robert L. Beal, Enid L. Beal and Bruce A. Beal Acquisition Fund
Accession Number2010.376
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsContemporary Art, Americas
ClassificationsSculpture
Bockscar was the B-29 that dropped the second atomic bomb on Japan in 1945. Jackson constructed the cockpit from charred wood and the view through the windscreen in Formica. The blackened wood evokes destruction, but Jackson says the pastel hues recall the sunsets in idealized 19th-century American landscape paintings. Formica was used for airplane propellers in World War II, and then in postwar suburban homes, where it often covered cheaper materials. Jackson calls it the “veneer that supports an illusion.”
ProvenanceThe artist, with Peter Blum Gallery, New York, 2010; Sold to Museum June 2010 (Accession date: June 16, 2010)
CopyrightCourtesy of the artist and Peter Blum Gallery, New York