Artworks

Walkman Compositions-Sanya (AM-FM) & the Sanyo M-G25 Radio #9, 2008-2009

  • Artist

    Jennie C. Jones

  • Title

    Walkman Compositions-Sanya (AM-FM) & the Sanyo M-G25 Radio #9

  • Date

    2008-2009

  • Medium

    Collage, ink, and acrylic on paper

  • Dimensions

    12 × 9 in. (30.5 × 22.9 cm) Frame: 20 3/4 × 16 3/4 in. (52.7 × 42.5 cm)

  • Credit line

    The Studio Museum in Harlem; gift of the artist

  • Object Number

    2009.8

Known for her investigations into music and sound, the conceptual artist Jennie C. Jones breaks down the iconic Walkman device into a minimalist design. Part of a larger series of Walkman compositions, Jones reinterprets the portable cassette player, invented in 1979, to comment on connections between personal, artistic, and mechanical aesthetics. Created before the iPod and CD player, the Walkman allowed for an individualized music listening experience while walking down the streets of a city or town. The stripped-down version of the device in Jones’s works on paper broadens the cultural significance of the object to include its visual history. Jones also looks to the functional design principles and simplification of form championed by the Bauhaus, a German art school founded in 1919.


Explore further
Artworks

Walkman Compositions-Sanya (AM-FM) & the Sanyo M-G25 Radio #9, 2008-2009

  • Artist

    Jennie C. Jones

  • Title

    Walkman Compositions-Sanya (AM-FM) & the Sanyo M-G25 Radio #9

  • Date

    2008-2009

  • Medium

    Collage, ink, and acrylic on paper

  • Dimensions

    12 × 9 in. (30.5 × 22.9 cm) Frame: 20 3/4 × 16 3/4 in. (52.7 × 42.5 cm)

  • Credit line

    The Studio Museum in Harlem; gift of the artist

  • Object Number

    2009.8

Known for her investigations into music and sound, the conceptual artist Jennie C. Jones breaks down the iconic Walkman device into a minimalist design. Part of a larger series of Walkman compositions, Jones reinterprets the portable cassette player, invented in 1979, to comment on connections between personal, artistic, and mechanical aesthetics. Created before the iPod and CD player, the Walkman allowed for an individualized music listening experience while walking down the streets of a city or town. The stripped-down version of the device in Jones’s works on paper broadens the cultural significance of the object to include its visual history. Jones also looks to the functional design principles and simplification of form championed by the Bauhaus, a German art school founded in 1919.


Explore further