Brooklyn-born painter Joyce Pensato (1941–2019) painted exuberant and explosive large-scale likenesses of cartoon characters and comic-book heroes. Her seemingly frenzied technique – involving the deliberate accretion of successive layers of bold linear gestures, rapid spattering and frequent erasures – results in alternately humorous and sinister imagery.
While her prima facie subject matter ranged from Batman, The Simpsons and Mickey Mouse to Felix the Cat and Elmo from Sesame Street, her artistic progenitors include Alberto Giacometti, Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Abstract Expressionists such as Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline and Philip Guston. Taking much of her material from her surroundings in her hometown of Brooklyn, New York – from graffitied walls to hand-scrawled shop signs – Pensato painted almost exclusively in shop-bought black and white enamel, while also employing charcoal and pastel for smaller-scale drawings.
In her large-scale 2014 enamel and metallic painting titled Chuckie, 2014, Pensato leaps away from the monochrome world she generally inhabited and into a burst of silver. The character’s floating head emerges from an indeterminate space – the source of its unnerving, guileless grin is concealed by successive and rapid sweeps of paint. The painting featured in the artist’s 2014 exhibition, ‘Joyceland’ at Lisson Gallery, London, UK.