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Auction archive: Lot number 6

Richard Prince

Estimate
£400,000 - £600,000
ca. US$568,678 - US$853,018
Price realised:
£389,000
ca. US$553,040
Auction archive: Lot number 6

Richard Prince

Estimate
£400,000 - £600,000
ca. US$568,678 - US$853,018
Price realised:
£389,000
ca. US$553,040
Beschreibung:

Richard Prince Do I Seem Insecure 1989 acrylic and silkscreen on canvas 173 x 122.2 cm (68 1/8 x 48 1/8 in.) Signed, titled and dated 'Richard Prince 1989 "Do I Seem Insecure"' along the overlap.
Provenance Galerie Ghislaine Hussenot, Paris Private Collection, Europe Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited New York, Haunch of Venison, Your History is Not Our History: New York in the 1980s, 5 March-1 May 2010 Literature Your History is Not Our History, exh. cat., Haunch of Venison, New York, 2010, p. 56 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Painted in 1989, this subversive anti-masterpiece is among the first works of art Richard Prince produced after moving away from his iconic appropriation of advertising images and photographs, a creative process he employed throughout the 1970s and well into the 1980s. A more complex variant of his initial Joke paintings, Prince created this work within a series known as the White Paintings. Continuing to produce laughter at the expense of someone or something else, Prince now added faceless imagery and a flurry of abstracted cartoons to the acerbic jokes. These transformative works are definitive multi-media pieces, a visual culmination of the collective work of the appropriation artists of the 1980s – and now, quintessential Prince creations. Do I Seem Insecure? is an amalgamation of various elements; from mass media imagery to drawings by the artist himself. Visually cohesive, with a continuity of black lines and text, the blend of discrete fragments imbues the work with an intrinsic sense of chaos and detachment. Prince masterfully weaves non-referential imagery with caustic humour in order to construct a new and obscure relationship between image and text. The canvas is defined by its white pigmented backdrop, in the middle of which floats Prince’s own illustrations of domestic environments, taken from cartoons in the New Yorker, and silkscreened images taken from mass-media publications. A dash of insipid green is the only disruption to an otherwise entirely dichromatic piece. A printed joke lies beneath, the crudeness of its printing evident in the repetition of the first two lines. Lacking easily identifiable focal pictorial elements, one’s eye is drawn to the joke again and again. This emphasis is unsurprising; through this work Prince is daring the viewer to take this one-liner joke as a legitimate piece of high art. Indeed, his radical use of these jokes as the only tangible pictorial theme is what Prince is most proud of, calling the Joke paintings ‘what I wanted to become known for.’ The jest itself is a satirical stab at the American family unit, a common theme amongst the Joke paintings, with Prince drawing on his own experience of growing up as a self-designated ‘loner kid’ and briefly living in the suburbs of Boston. Characterised by deadpan humour, often through rapid-fire one-liners, Prince’s jokes are taken from Borsch-belt humour, the work of Jewish comedians in the summer resorts of the Catskill Mountains throughout the 20th century – where the artist now has a home. By appropriating these comedians preferred themes of employment, family and bad luck, Prince is at once both giving permanence to this sardonic humour and mocking the expectations and absurdity inherent in demotic American culture it implies. Read More Artist Bio Richard Prince American • 1947 While some artists are known for a signature style, Richard Prince is most closely associated with his subject matter: for instance, Cowboys, his series of the Marlboro man magnified between 1980 and 1994; Nurses, sinister yet seductive, all copies from pulp novel covers; joke text paintings, simple block lettering of his own or appropriated jokes. Often labelled an artist of the Pictures Generation alongside Cindy Sherman and Robert Longo Prince has been said to be the contemporary artist who most understands the depth and influence of mass media over life in the 20th and 21st centuries. In whichever medium Prince chooses to work, he stays within the realm of appropriation. Of course Prince is not met without controversy, and he has been on the losing end of several lawsu

Auction archive: Lot number 6
Auction:
Datum:
27 Jun 2016
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Richard Prince Do I Seem Insecure 1989 acrylic and silkscreen on canvas 173 x 122.2 cm (68 1/8 x 48 1/8 in.) Signed, titled and dated 'Richard Prince 1989 "Do I Seem Insecure"' along the overlap.
Provenance Galerie Ghislaine Hussenot, Paris Private Collection, Europe Gagosian Gallery, Los Angeles Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited New York, Haunch of Venison, Your History is Not Our History: New York in the 1980s, 5 March-1 May 2010 Literature Your History is Not Our History, exh. cat., Haunch of Venison, New York, 2010, p. 56 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Painted in 1989, this subversive anti-masterpiece is among the first works of art Richard Prince produced after moving away from his iconic appropriation of advertising images and photographs, a creative process he employed throughout the 1970s and well into the 1980s. A more complex variant of his initial Joke paintings, Prince created this work within a series known as the White Paintings. Continuing to produce laughter at the expense of someone or something else, Prince now added faceless imagery and a flurry of abstracted cartoons to the acerbic jokes. These transformative works are definitive multi-media pieces, a visual culmination of the collective work of the appropriation artists of the 1980s – and now, quintessential Prince creations. Do I Seem Insecure? is an amalgamation of various elements; from mass media imagery to drawings by the artist himself. Visually cohesive, with a continuity of black lines and text, the blend of discrete fragments imbues the work with an intrinsic sense of chaos and detachment. Prince masterfully weaves non-referential imagery with caustic humour in order to construct a new and obscure relationship between image and text. The canvas is defined by its white pigmented backdrop, in the middle of which floats Prince’s own illustrations of domestic environments, taken from cartoons in the New Yorker, and silkscreened images taken from mass-media publications. A dash of insipid green is the only disruption to an otherwise entirely dichromatic piece. A printed joke lies beneath, the crudeness of its printing evident in the repetition of the first two lines. Lacking easily identifiable focal pictorial elements, one’s eye is drawn to the joke again and again. This emphasis is unsurprising; through this work Prince is daring the viewer to take this one-liner joke as a legitimate piece of high art. Indeed, his radical use of these jokes as the only tangible pictorial theme is what Prince is most proud of, calling the Joke paintings ‘what I wanted to become known for.’ The jest itself is a satirical stab at the American family unit, a common theme amongst the Joke paintings, with Prince drawing on his own experience of growing up as a self-designated ‘loner kid’ and briefly living in the suburbs of Boston. Characterised by deadpan humour, often through rapid-fire one-liners, Prince’s jokes are taken from Borsch-belt humour, the work of Jewish comedians in the summer resorts of the Catskill Mountains throughout the 20th century – where the artist now has a home. By appropriating these comedians preferred themes of employment, family and bad luck, Prince is at once both giving permanence to this sardonic humour and mocking the expectations and absurdity inherent in demotic American culture it implies. Read More Artist Bio Richard Prince American • 1947 While some artists are known for a signature style, Richard Prince is most closely associated with his subject matter: for instance, Cowboys, his series of the Marlboro man magnified between 1980 and 1994; Nurses, sinister yet seductive, all copies from pulp novel covers; joke text paintings, simple block lettering of his own or appropriated jokes. Often labelled an artist of the Pictures Generation alongside Cindy Sherman and Robert Longo Prince has been said to be the contemporary artist who most understands the depth and influence of mass media over life in the 20th and 21st centuries. In whichever medium Prince chooses to work, he stays within the realm of appropriation. Of course Prince is not met without controversy, and he has been on the losing end of several lawsu

Auction archive: Lot number 6
Auction:
Datum:
27 Jun 2016
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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