Back Blackout

Sources

Flipcommons AI Descriptions (Title) and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

Single source (6 fields)

description
Flipcommons AI Descriptions (Title) As Chicago has been the gravitation center of pinball design and manufacturing for decades, so too have Chicago-based artists been integral to pinball art. For Blackout, [[manufacturer:id:714]] reached out to the painter Ed Paschke (1939–2004), who was an important member of the Chicago Imagists, a group redefining contemporary art in their own surreal style. Many Imagists were themselves influenced by pinball—as demonstrated by a 2017 exhibition at the Elmhurst Art Museum—and Paschke himself owned a [[title:id:2254]] machine ([[manufacturer:id:714]], 1979). Unfortunately for Paschke, his avant-garde style was not what Williams wanted. After producing his concept painting for this machine, also titled Blackout (1980), the company thought it was too "far out." Its amorphous, masked astronauts, its multicolored cosmic rays, and its pock-marked green planet were too strange. The company tapped [[person:id:110]]—himself a student of Ray Yoshida, another Chicago Imagist—to redesign Paschke's painting in a more conventional style. But, according to Mitchell, "I want Ed Paschke to get credit for [the] Blackout backglass design. He did the original art concept. Ed Paschke was my teacher and mentor at the Art Institute of Chicago. His usage of color influenced me for the rest of my life." Paschke went on to curate an exhibition of pinball art in 1982 at the Chicago Cultural Center with Mitchell's collaboration. used
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Flipcommons Catalog BO used
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Flipcommons Catalog Blackout used
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Flipcommons Catalog 1888 used
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Flipcommons Catalog GRwYo used
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Flipcommons Catalog blackout used