A Tab is a Bill

In 1976 Johnson began asking friends, art-world figures, and celebrities to sit and have their silhouettes traced onto paper. He thus built a library of nearly three hundred profile templates he could use and reuse. As a portrait form, the silhouette reduces its subject to a graphic shape, identifiable but resistant to psychological interpretation. In this example, Johnson overlapped the profiles of 1950s movie heartthrob Tab Hunter (1931–2018) and avantgarde writer William S. Burroughs (1914–1997).

In the 1990s Johnson photographed one of his stock props, a stuffed kingfisher, in combination with Burroughs’s silhouette. The beak of the bird extends the author’s prominent nose: a bill replacing the bill of a Bill.

Ray Johnson (1927–1995)
Untitled (Tab Hunter William Burroughs)
ca. 1976–81
Collage on cardboard panel
12 × 12 1/2 in. (30.48 × 31.75 cm)
The Morgan Library & Museum, gift of Frances Beatty, Allen Adler,
Alexander Adler, and the Ray Johnson Estate; 2022.3:2
© Ray Johnson / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Ray Johnson (1927–1995)
William S. Burroughs silhouette and kingfisher
winter 1992
Commercially processed chromogenic print
4 × 6
The Morgan Library & Museum, gifts of the Ray Johnson Estate, courtesy
of Frances Beatty; 2022.2:8
© Ray Johnson / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York