fbpx
Charles Howard
Abstraction in Flight, 1942

Artwork Info

Artwork title
Abstraction in Flight
Artist name
Charles Howard
Date created
1942
Classification
painting
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
72 in. × 96 in. (182.88 cm × 243.84 cm)
Credit
Collection SFMOMA
The United States General Services Administration, formerly Federal Works Agency, Works Projects Administration (WPA), allocation to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
Permanent URL
https://www.sfmoma.org/artwork/1034.43
Artwork status
Not on view at this time.

Audio Stories

A pilot’s view of Abstraction in Flight

Show TranscriptHide Transcript

transcripts

SFX: Sound of a Spitfire taking off 

 

NARRATOR: Charles Howard painted this image in 1942 for the Alameda Naval Air Station. Howard’s vision of flight resonates with veteran pilot John Suckow.   

 

JOHN SUCKOW: My name is John Suckow. I was a Navy pilot in the Vietnam era. I flew A4s and A6s.   This looks very reminiscent of a stylized Spitfire. It’s got the tapered wings, the empennage back, power plan forward.  

 

SFX: Music 

 

SUCKOW: That colorful piece in the center looks like the chord of a wing, chord meaning a slice through the center of it. And it also, with the different colors, looks like a representation of where the pressure points on the wing would be, caused by the lift and low pressure at the top of the wing, which gives you the lift and allows you to fly.  

 

The lines going up and over the wing and going underneath the wing are a good representation of what’s called laminar air flow. On the top they go up, they’re disrupted by the shape of the wing, so they go up and that gives you a lower pressure on top of the wing.   

 

And then when you look at the background, that’s kind of reminiscent of the hills around here.  

 

SFX: Plane flies L-R 

 

Now, the funnest thing that you can do with an airplane is, on a day when you know that nobody’s around, you could go flying through the valleys and up the mountains of the clouds.  

 

SFX: Plane flies R-L 

 

That is the most incredible feeling.

Read MoreCollapse

Español

普通话

Other Works by Charles Howard

Please note that artwork locations are subject to change, and not all works are on view at all times. If you are planning a visit to SFMOMA to see a specific work of art, we suggest you contact us at collections@sfmoma.org to confirm it will be on view.

Only a portion of SFMOMA's collection is currently online, and the information presented here is subject to revision. Please contact us at collections@sfmoma.org to verify collection holdings and artwork information. If you are interested in receiving a high resolution image of an artwork for educational, scholarly, or publication purposes, please contact us at copyright@sfmoma.org.

This resource is for educational use and its contents may not be reproduced without permission. Please review our Terms of Use for more information.