Joyce Pensato’s darker leanings were often obscured by her penchant for cartoon characters. A new show of the late artist’s work lays these dueling forces bare.

WORDS

DATE

SHARE

Twitter
LinkedIn
Facebook
Email
Portrait of Joyce Pensato in front of Mickey Mouse mural by Elizabeth Ferry, Petzel
Joyce Pensato. Photo by Elizabeth Ferry and all imagery courtesy of Petzel.

Joyce Pensato never met a Mickey Mouse she couldn’t disfigure. The late painter—known for turning pop culture’s most recognizable cartoon faces into dripping, manic images—found a rich terrain, both emotionally and formally, in the on-screen realm. The Brooklyn native’s canvases were always loud, even when rendered in black and white. She wielded enamel with a masterful edge, distilling the iconography of mass culture into something as grotesque as it was human.

Six years after her death at the age of 78, the ICA Miami has organized an expansive posthumous survey, opening on December 2 and on view through March 15. The show brings together more than 65 works spanning five decades, from her earliest Batman sketches to the explosive enamel paintings that defined her late era.

“We wanted to bring renewed attention to Joyce’s critical place in American art history,” ICA Art + Research Center Director Gean Moreno tells CULTURED. “Her practice intersects Abstract Expressionism, Pop, and a uniquely personal visual language, yet she has often been overlooked in canonical narratives.” Leading the charge are the ICA’s artistic director, Alex Gartenfeld; curator Stephanie Seidel; and Moreno.

Gartenfeld first worked with the artist in 2013, commissioning murals that traveled to Rome and Paris. Then, in 2017, the trio invited Pensato to create a site-specific installation for the museum’s “The Everywhere Studio” exhibition, which explored the significance of the artistic sanctum. This year’s show, the most comprehensive presentation of her work to date, unfolds across character-themed rooms—featuring The Simpsons, South Park, Mickey Mouse, and Batman. (“I see him as strength and real power. I tried to do Spider-Man but he looked like a ballerina!” she once told New American Paintings of the caped crusader.) 

Joyce Pensato, Untitled</em>, circa 1976, charcoal drawing, Petzel
Joyce Pensato, Untitled, circa 1976.

Beyond the cartoon veneer lies a painter deeply engaged with the history of abstraction. Early oil work from the 1980s reveal the influence of her mentor, Joan Mitchell, with broad slashes of color and flurries of energy. As Pensato’s confidence grew, so too did her wit. “We kept circling back to the tension Joyce draws between humor and darkness,” Seidel says. “On the surface, her subjects are familiar cultural icons, but she pushes them into a psychological terrain where comedy dissolves into tragedy.”

Her influence, the curators posit, can be felt in the work of a generation of artists such as Sean Landers and Cosima von Bonin. In their gestures, whether painted or performed, one senses the echo of Pensato’s insistence that art can—and should—simultaneously entertain, disturb, and illuminate the complications of contemporary life.

We’ve Waited All Year For This…

Our 10th annual Young Artist list is here, comprised of 27 names you need to know ahead of 2026.

You’ve almost hit your limit.

You’re approaching your limit of complimentary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.
You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

GET ACCESS

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want more in your life?

For less than the price of a cocktail, you can help independent journalism thrive.

Pop-Up-1_c
Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here
Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want more in your life?

For less than the price of a cocktail, you can help independent journalism thrive.

Pop-Up-1_c
Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here
Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

You’ve almost hit your limit.

You’re approaching your limit of complimentary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.
Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here
You’re approaching your limit of complementary articles. For expanded access, become a digital subscriber for less than $2 a week.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

This is a Critics' Table subscriber exclusive.

Subscribe to keep reading and support independent art criticism.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want more in your life?

For less than the price of a cocktail, you can help independent journalism thrive.

Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Pop-Up-1_c

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

You’ve reached your limit.

Sign up for a digital subscription, starting at less than $2 a week.

Already a Subscriber? Sign in Here

Want a seat at the table? To continue reading this article, sign up today.

Support independent criticism for $10/month (or just $110/year).

Already a subscriber? Log in.