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Image
Artists
Sperry, Chuck More info
Manufacturer
Hangar 18
Edition Details
Year:2014
Class:Cinema
Status:Fan Art
Released:03/07/14
Run:200
Technique:Screen Print
Paper:Archival cream paper
Size:20 X 28
Markings:Signed & Numbered
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Event
"One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" @ The Astor Theater
Comments
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My first reaction was to make a poster featuring Jack Nicholson, in his role as McMurphy. Then after a few rough drafts, I set about working on a poster featuring Nurse Mildred Ratched, played by Louise Fletcher, the role for which she won the Oscar. Nurse Ratched is a perfect subject for an art piece as America is struggling to reform it's health care system. She is the embodiment of a dehumanizing American medical establishment, a figure without pity, one who punishes the objects of her prejudice through bureaucratic sadism.

I chose to depict Nurse Ratched from the perspective of her victims. The impact of this poster is that it is intended to be a portrait of her, as if it were done in art therapy by one of her patients. I chose a psychedelic presentation, using psychedelic color theory and using what I've learned about the science of optical perception. I overlaid my psychedelic presentation with techniques drawn from outsider art, or art of the insane.

I remembered the work of artist Louis Wain, the popular and widely published early 20th Century prosaic cat artist. Wain lost his mind late in his career, either from a progressive schizophrenia, or through exposure to toxoplasmosis (a disease that is often passed to humans by cats). He was institutionalized and started to create incredible cat paintings, which have been published in Psychology textbooks as an illustration of the disintegration of the human mind.

Louis Wain was a perfect starting point for a psychedelic portrait of Nurse Ratched , from the point-of-view of one of her patients.

Wain often employed psychologically troubling, perfectly symmetrical compositions, and toiled with precise and obsessive geometric details which were meticulously mirrored on both sides of his symmetrical paintings. My design utilizes this symmetry and geometric detail to achieve this baffling effect.

The blue forms are crenelated and manifold, so as to maximize the number of boundaries of contact between the two vibrating colors, red and blue.

I used Eye-fry complimentary contrasting color, blue and red, taking care in my studio to custom mix them using fluorescent pigments in powder form, to an equal intensity. In brief, the resulting psychological effect on the optic nerve is that the color receptors are confused where the two colors meet.

Subtly printed over the finished piece is a light translucent grey halftoned portrait of Nurse Ratched, which I also flipped from a xerox and created a perfectly symmetrical face. The symmetrical, light halftone photo a secret image and appears in two ways. One way is to view the poster in UV backlight. The other way is to convert a photo of the poster into black and white (easy to do with the "Willow" or "Inkwell" Instagram filters). The equal red and blues meet at the same value of grey and allow the Nurse Ratched halftone portrait to appear very clearly.

The resulting poster for "One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" is a combination of many of the techniques I've learned about printing, design, art aesthetics, psychology and the science of optical perception, appropriately used for one of the greatest American films.
Sales History
Sold18
Six Month Average$120.00
Average Price$73.96
Lowest Price$37.00
Highest Price$120.00
Original Price$44.00
Collections33