Works on paper at the Art Institute of Chicago by the retired veteran and circus worker, who began to draw in the final decade of his life
It was at the age of 71, while living as a retired veteran in Chicago, that Joseph E. Yoakum reported having the dream that inspired him to become an artist. And so in the early 1960s Yoakum – who had worked in several travelling circuses and served in the US army during the First World War – began producing surreal landscapes inspired by these past life experiences at home and abroad. A selection of these brightly coloured works on paper now goes on view at the Art Institute of Chicago (12 June–18 October), in an exhibition co-organised with MoMA and the Menil Collection. Find out more from Art Institute of Chicago’s website.
Waianae Mtn Range Entrance to Pearl Harbor and Honolulu Oahu of Hawaiian Islands (1968), Joseph E. Yoakum. Collection of Christina Ramberg and Phil Hanson
Mt Baykal of Yablonvy Mtn Range near Ulan-Ude near Lake Baykal of Lower Siberia Russia E Asia (1969), Joseph E. Yoakum. Collection of Gladys Nilsson and Jim Nutt
Grizzly Gulch Valley Ohansburg Vermont (n.d.), Joseph E. Yoakum. The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Massichute Pleasureland from Workbook C (1972), Joseph E. Yoakum. The Art Institute of Chicago