JUNE WAYNE・ Art + Science
The Terrestrial Works
Optics & Perception

 
 
Wayne explored perspective in her own painting, but at the point where its laws broke down. She noticed a heightened sense of motion when peripheral vision took over from focal vision, and sought to synthesize the aberration.
— Pat Gilmour
 
Wayne’s experiments with perception in the late forties and early fifties, in paintings and lithographs in which movement and details were brought within the same picture plane, compresses a panoramic vista—what the Artist called ‘a reverse cinerama’. Scanning GT, 1987, an exploration in perception made decades later, achieves a synthesis of such fixed and disparate elements as the two identical rectangles of acrylic on wood, the hills, and valleys of collage elements of molded paper—the determined detail in an ever unfurling field, the space-bending but almost imperceptible transition of the surrounding ground from yellow to its polar opposite and magnetized complement, violet.
— Arlene Raven, "June Wayne, A Retrospective”, Neuberger Museum of Art, 1997.
image of June Wayne’s study of the dreamers

The Dreamers

image of June Wayne’s lithograph "the bride"

The Bride

Image of June Wayne’s lithograph “The Advocate"

The Advocate

Image of June Wayne’s lithograph “The Suitor"

The Suitor

Also from 1972 is the tapestry La Cible (The Target) which, in concept, is based on two works from 1951: the lithography The Target and the oil painting The Law Court, part of the Justice series. Both explored optics, specifically binocular vision, a topic that had fascinated Wayne some twenty years earlier, perhaps understandable as she had been nearsighted from birth.
— Christa C. Mayer Thurman
tapestry “La Cible” (The Target)

La Cible (The Target)

image of June Wayne’s the dreamers

The Dreamers

Photo of June Wayne’s "Study for the messenger"

Study For The Messenger

When Wayne was four or five years old, she was looking at comics printed in color, ‘and being nearsighted, noticed that the images were made up of thousands of little dots, that the green was made of blue and yellow dots’.
— Betty Ann Brown
Image of June Wayne’s oil on canvas “The Messenger"

The Messenger

image of June Wayne’s strange moon in color

Strange Moon

image of June Wayne’s the tunnel

The Tunnel

In ‘Strange Moon’ she determined the viewer’s eye-path by moving a floating disc across a field like an expanded chequerboard, debossing the stone to render the sequential lunar shapes with eggshell fragility. It preceded by a decade or more the Optical Art first seen by New Yorkers in the ‘Responsive Eye’ exhibition of 1965.
— Pat Gilmour
image of June Wayne’s Strange Moon

Strange Moon

The tiny lithograph ‘Strange Moon’ of 1951 preceded by a decade or more the Optical Art first seen by New Yorkers in the ‘Responsive Eye’ exhibition of 1965.
— Pat Gilmour

The Witnesses

image of June Wayne The Advocate

The Advocate