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Auction archive: Lot number 11

Richard Prince

Estimate
US$1,000,000 - US$1,500,000
Price realised:
US$1,805,000
Auction archive: Lot number 11

Richard Prince

Estimate
US$1,000,000 - US$1,500,000
Price realised:
US$1,805,000
Beschreibung:

Richard Prince Untitled (Cowboy) 1998-99 c-print 59 1/2 x 83 1/2 in. (150.8 x 212.1 cm) Signed "Richard Prince" on a label affixed to the reverse. This work is number 2 from an edition of 2 plus 1 artist's proof.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, New York New York, Phillips de Pury & Company, Contemporary Art Part I, November 8, 2010, lot 113 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited London, Serpentine Gallery, Richard Prince Continuation, June 26 - September 7, 2008 (another example exhibited) Catalogue Essay "I first started 'seeing' the Marlboro advertisement in 1980 while I was working at Time/Life magazine. 1980 was the first year they started using other models for the 'cowboy'.... I thought these new models were more generic and less identifiable and could make it seem like after the logo and copy were cropped out that the re-photographed image could be more my own. Every week I would 'claim one.'" Richard Prince The greatest artists possess the power to blur the line between reality and illusion. Richard Prince aside from demonstrating this formidable skill on countless occasions during the past thirty years, has become somewhat of a mythmaker in American art by redefining the origins of our national heroes. Though the cowboy himself has come down to us in a variety of forms—from the prideful singing of Gene Autry to the peon of loneliness that is the symbol of the frontier—Prince has manipulated certainly his sexiest form, that of the Marlboro Man, into something much deeper: an exploration of contemporary masculinity. In Untitled (Cowboy), 1998-99, Prince visits the cowboy for the second time in his career, delivering us a cinematic vision of America’s greatest hero. First embarking upon his Cowboy series in the mid-1980s, Richard Prince set about his monumentally influential project of appropriation now known as the “rephotographs.” Subtracting any kind of branding or commercial advertising from his source material, Prince blew up his images in order to emphasize their individual aesthetic appeal independent from their original purposes of product marketing. In doing so, Prince has been recognized as one of the greatest innovators of the readymade since Duchamp himself, often occupying the same breath as Jeff Koons or Richard Pettibone Yet Prince’s photographic approach had an effect upon the world of photography as well, as his work has come to influence an entire generation of advertising executives and freelance journalists: “It is now widely accepted that Richard Prince was slightly in advance of several other artists in his use of this radical method of appropriation known as re-photography, and that he played a significant role in the development of a new, oppositional type of photographic practice, critically described as postmodernist. He was part of a generation that…used photographic procedures to simultaneously redefine photography and art.” (L. Phillips, Richard Prince New York, 1992, p. 28). The result has been a new presence of artistic practice in common methods of marketing—a higher standard for those intending to sell their product. It is no great wonder that Prince chose to return to the Cowboy, one of his most celebrated series, in the late 1990s. According to Prince himself, finding a central figure in his work was a way to live vicariously through his subjects: "Without him as an identifying factor, it was easier to present these pictures as something other than they were. I think that’s the way I felt at the time anyway. Other than I was.” (L. Phillips, Richard Prince New York, 1992, p. 95). But while his work of the 1980s had a distinctly gritty feel due to its inferior technology blown up to unintended size, Prince’s Cowboys of the late 1990s are more streamlined in their pixels, more intimate in their declarations of manhood. Fascinatingly, this is due to two circumstances: the first are major advances in photographic technology, allowing for a finer appearance after the photograph is appropriated. The second is Prince’s own influence: Marlboro’s advertisements of the late 1990s are in some ways a direct response to Prince’s work of the 1980s. In turn, the present lot is less a simple

Auction archive: Lot number 11
Auction:
Datum:
13 Nov 2014
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Richard Prince Untitled (Cowboy) 1998-99 c-print 59 1/2 x 83 1/2 in. (150.8 x 212.1 cm) Signed "Richard Prince" on a label affixed to the reverse. This work is number 2 from an edition of 2 plus 1 artist's proof.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, New York New York, Phillips de Pury & Company, Contemporary Art Part I, November 8, 2010, lot 113 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited London, Serpentine Gallery, Richard Prince Continuation, June 26 - September 7, 2008 (another example exhibited) Catalogue Essay "I first started 'seeing' the Marlboro advertisement in 1980 while I was working at Time/Life magazine. 1980 was the first year they started using other models for the 'cowboy'.... I thought these new models were more generic and less identifiable and could make it seem like after the logo and copy were cropped out that the re-photographed image could be more my own. Every week I would 'claim one.'" Richard Prince The greatest artists possess the power to blur the line between reality and illusion. Richard Prince aside from demonstrating this formidable skill on countless occasions during the past thirty years, has become somewhat of a mythmaker in American art by redefining the origins of our national heroes. Though the cowboy himself has come down to us in a variety of forms—from the prideful singing of Gene Autry to the peon of loneliness that is the symbol of the frontier—Prince has manipulated certainly his sexiest form, that of the Marlboro Man, into something much deeper: an exploration of contemporary masculinity. In Untitled (Cowboy), 1998-99, Prince visits the cowboy for the second time in his career, delivering us a cinematic vision of America’s greatest hero. First embarking upon his Cowboy series in the mid-1980s, Richard Prince set about his monumentally influential project of appropriation now known as the “rephotographs.” Subtracting any kind of branding or commercial advertising from his source material, Prince blew up his images in order to emphasize their individual aesthetic appeal independent from their original purposes of product marketing. In doing so, Prince has been recognized as one of the greatest innovators of the readymade since Duchamp himself, often occupying the same breath as Jeff Koons or Richard Pettibone Yet Prince’s photographic approach had an effect upon the world of photography as well, as his work has come to influence an entire generation of advertising executives and freelance journalists: “It is now widely accepted that Richard Prince was slightly in advance of several other artists in his use of this radical method of appropriation known as re-photography, and that he played a significant role in the development of a new, oppositional type of photographic practice, critically described as postmodernist. He was part of a generation that…used photographic procedures to simultaneously redefine photography and art.” (L. Phillips, Richard Prince New York, 1992, p. 28). The result has been a new presence of artistic practice in common methods of marketing—a higher standard for those intending to sell their product. It is no great wonder that Prince chose to return to the Cowboy, one of his most celebrated series, in the late 1990s. According to Prince himself, finding a central figure in his work was a way to live vicariously through his subjects: "Without him as an identifying factor, it was easier to present these pictures as something other than they were. I think that’s the way I felt at the time anyway. Other than I was.” (L. Phillips, Richard Prince New York, 1992, p. 95). But while his work of the 1980s had a distinctly gritty feel due to its inferior technology blown up to unintended size, Prince’s Cowboys of the late 1990s are more streamlined in their pixels, more intimate in their declarations of manhood. Fascinatingly, this is due to two circumstances: the first are major advances in photographic technology, allowing for a finer appearance after the photograph is appropriated. The second is Prince’s own influence: Marlboro’s advertisements of the late 1990s are in some ways a direct response to Prince’s work of the 1980s. In turn, the present lot is less a simple

Auction archive: Lot number 11
Auction:
Datum:
13 Nov 2014
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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