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Jenny Holzer On Sale

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10 Inflammatory Essays
By Jenny Holzer
Located in Oslo, NO
10 offset lithographs on variously coloured paper Each 25 x 25 cm. Set of 10 offset lithographs published by the ICA, London, in an edition of 10 in 2018 (plus unlimited artist proof...
Category

20th Century Contemporary Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Survival Cups
By Jenny Holzer
Located in Toronto, Ontario
Jenny Holzer's profound, menacing and sometimes humorous "Truisms" first appeared in the late 1970's in a variety of forms, but primarily as a type of street art with lists of her s...
Category

Late 20th Century Conceptual Sculptures

Materials

Polystyrene, Mixed Media

Lack of Charisma Can be Fatal -- Print, Postcards, Truisms by Jenny Holzer
By Jenny Holzer
Located in London, GB
JENNY HOLZER Truisms [Lack of Charisma Can be Fatal], after 1994 Screenprint on balsa wood multiple with text from the Survival (1983-1985) and Truisms (1977-1979) series Published b...
Category

1990s Pop Art More Prints

Materials

Screen

Jenny Holzer "Ceramic Chargers", 2002
By Jenny Holzer
Located in Toronto, Ontario
Jenny Holzer's menacing (and sometimes humorous) "Truisms" first appeared in the late 1970s in a variety of forms, but initially oriented towards a type of street art. Over the pas...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Abstract Prints

Materials

Ceramic

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Jenny Holzer for sale on 1stDibs

Known for taking art out of the traditional “white cube” of galleries and museums and onto the streets, Jenny Holzer is one of the most potent feminist Neo-Conceptual artists of the 20th century. Her most iconic work critiques the information age and consumerism by reclaiming its primary media — conventional print billboards, storefront posters and LED signs.

“I used language because I wanted to offer content that people — not necessarily art people — could understand,” the Ohio-born Holzer told Interview magazine. She received her MFA in painting from Rhode Island School of Design, where her work was influenced by Abstract Expressionism. It was while in the Independent Study Program at the Whitney Museum of American Art that Holzer became inspired to work at the intersection of public art and language.

In the late 1970s, after becoming an active participant in the downtown Manhattan artist collective Colab, which included Tom Otterness and Christy Rupp, Holzer began to create her legendary “Truisms” series. Printing anonymous one-line aphorisms in bold and italicized text on broadsheets, she pasted them up in public spaces all over New York City. The “Truisms” are provocative in questioning how we receive and process information. The work elicits debate and represents a range of perspectives. In an era that saw the rise of street art and graffiti, Holzer’s pithy word art would also find viewers by way of T-shirts, stickers and park benches, into which her slogans were carved.

Holzer’s more combative “Inflammatory Essays” (1979–82) took the form of mass-produced posters on colored paper — each featuring paragraphs as compared to the punch-line structure of “Truisms.” These touched on subjects such as violence, misogyny, power structures and consumerism, all of which have continued to be central in her work.

Starting in 1982 as part of a Public Art Fund project, Holzer projected “Protect me from what I want” and other “Truisms” on the Spectacolor board, a large computerized light signboard in New York City’s Times Square. Her “Abuse of power comes as no surprise,” which has appeared on T-shirts as part of the series, has taken on new life in an increasingly politically divided America.

Just as it did in the 1970s, the forcefulness of her work continues to make both viewers and the art world stop and pay attention. She has had solo exhibitions at the Brooklyn Museum, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Tate Modern in London and elsewhere. She has also created permanent installations including the New York City AIDS Memorial. A 2014 show at New York’s Cheim & Read featured oil-on-linen canvases based on declassified government files pertaining to detainees from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

Find Jenny Holzer prints and sculptures on 1stDibs.