Shawn Huckins
In 1800, Gilbert Stuart’s iconic full-length portrait of George
Washington was installed at the White House, inaugurating
the White House Art Collection, which was intended to
provide a historical record enshrining American ideals and
accomplishments. The paintings I choose as subjects for my
series The Erasures are drawn from this collection.
The Erasures is a collection of historical paintings meticulously
reproduced by hand and then obscured with a hand-painted
checkerboard pattern. Familiar to Web and graphic designers,
the gray-and-white motif signifies the software’s “eraser” tool.
The editing marks superimposed on the paintings in The Erasures
vary from random, spontaneous swipes covering part of the
subject to structured, rectilinear shapes threatening to overtake
it completely. Whether erasure is portrayed as a temperamental
outburst or a methodically executed plan, the resulting
obliteration is much the same. It is only in the series titles that
we detect resistance to such a redaction of history.