176
176
2013
ink on paper 5⅞ h × 4 w in (15 × 10 cm)
ink on paper 5⅞ h × 4 w in (15 × 10 cm)
estimate: $700–900
result: $945
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Signed to verso ‘Jason’.
This work will ship from Lambertville, New Jersey.
After graduating from the University of Michigan with a dual degree in anthropology and art and design in 2004, Jason Polan moved to New York City. The following year, he founded the Taco Bell Drawing Club at the restaurant chain’s Union Square location, establishing a weekly space for individuals of all skill levels to engage in observational drawing sessions in a decidedly mainstream venue.
In the September 24, 2018 issue of The New Yorker, Naomi Fry recounts her experience visiting Polan and other members at the Taco Bell on 14th Street in Union Square:
“Artists and laymen—most of them Polan’s friends and social-media followers—gather at the fast-food restaurant to sketch and talk. Charter get-togethers can happen anywhere. ‘If you draw at a Taco Bell, you’re a member,’ Polan said. ‘I can give you a card.’ Opening his wallet, he produced a laminated card that read, ‘Official Member, Taco Bell Drawing Club.’ He went on, ‘There are no rules. I often draw people, but you can draw whatever you want.”
In New York City, Polan kept members and newcomers alike informed via a dedicated blog about the meeting schedule of the Taco Bell Drawing Club, which generally convened on Wednesdays at the Union Square location, with occasional exceptions. He also shared diverting commentaries and photos of participants drawing in a setting not typically associated with art making.
When Polan traveled, either back home to Michigan or anywhere in the world, he would often seek out Taco Bell restaurants where he could draw. During Polan’s lifetime and since his passing, his original, inclusive concept for a contemporary art salon has spawned additional Taco Bell Drawing Clubs far and wide.
As someone who circulated freely through the urban environment of New York City, Jason Polan’s work as an artist was intimately connected to experiencing all that the metropolis had to offer—and fondly, sometimes obsessively, cataloging its ceaseless variety. Polan moved to New York in 2005 and passed away at the start of 2020. Because his time there spanned the post-9/11 to pre-COVID era, he absorbed the city during the slow reconstruction of lower Manhattan, amid the shock of the Great Recession of 2008, and prior to the dramatic shutdown brought on by the global pandemic.
Both ambition and optimism are inherent in Polan’s embrace of New York's sprawling physical terrain and masses of people, who are without fail rendered as distinct individuals by Polan’s hand. Above all, his artistic project suggests freedom of movement and proximity to others, along with the importance of noticing and carefully documenting, while evoking in retrospect our shared loss of spatial innocence.
“[Jason] died before the pandemic,” Sadie Stein noted in her opinion piece for The New York Times in early 2021, “when most of us still had yet to learn that those occasional breaks from urban anonymity, those small moments of connection—wordless, spoken, odd, quotidian—are a tremendous luxury.”
Apart from regularly sharing a table with friend and artist Stefan Marx at Printed Matter’s annual New York Art Book Fair in recent years, Polan did not exhibit widely or have his work shown by major galleries. Among the exceptions were his first-ever solo show, Living and Working, at Chelsea's Nicholas Robinson Gallery in 2011 and an exhibition featuring some of his works at the Parisian retail boutique Colette in 2013. Nevertheless, Polan’s prolific nature and egalitarian approach made him both a well-known and beloved artist, someone who imbued rare warmth and humanity into his art and everyday interactions, which were ultimately inextricable from each other.