Self Portrait
2020
Sarah Cain
Artist, American, born 1979

Self-Portrait features a dynamic whorl of hard-edged colored bands creating curvilinear forms that alternate between foreground—for example, the large black band with drips that descend throughout the lower register—and background, as illustrated by the black translucent ground of smaller organic shapes. Cain incorporates an abstract vocabulary of form, color, and materials in this painting to create speculation about this painting’s meaning as a self-portrait. She sewed prismatic beads, given to her by her mother, into the center of the canvas as a kind of supportive, light-filled spine—an example of the personal symbolism in this work. Cain’s Self-Portrait painting brings the tradition of abstract painting into the present and continues a rich dialog with countless works in the National Gallery’s collection, including abstract works by artists Lynda Benglis, Ellsworth Kelly, Joan Mitchell, Amy Sillman, Joan Snyder, Frank Stella, and Richard Tuttle.
Artwork overview
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Medium
acrylic, gouache, latex, prism beads, and plastic thread on canvas
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Credit Line
Purchased as the Gift of Sharon Percy Rockefeller and Senator John Davison Rockefeller IV
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Dimensions
overall: 228.6 × 228.6 × 7.62 cm (90 × 90 × 3 in.)
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Accession Number
2021.32.1
Artwork history & notes
Provenance
The artist; (Anthony Meier Fine Arts, San Francisco, and Vielmetter Gallery, Los Angeles); purchased 20 September 2020 by NGA.
Associated Names
Exhibition History
2020
Sarah Cain: The Possibility of Overcoming Negative Thought, Vielmetter, Los Angeles, 2020.
2021
Sarah Cain: In Nature, The Momentary, Crystal Bridges, Bentonville, 2021, brochure, color repro.
Bibliography
2022
Donovan, Molly. "Gifts & Acquisitions." Art for the Nation no. 65 (Spring 2022): 14-15, repro.