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Rene Ricard
Ashes of Roses by Rene Ricard 1989 New York Lower East Side poetry LES

1989

About the Item

Ashes of Roses is Rene Ricard's mauve-colored map of Rivington Street between Suffolk and Clinton Street, with a white arrow pointing to the word mofongo, indicating a Puerto Rican restaurant at that location. William Rand describes a lunch outing with Rene in 1989: “…Rene suggests we stroll over to Avenue B to eat cuchifritos. He orders in Spanish and the food is madly exotic to me. It is another world over there.” This painting is Rene's culinary memento mori, contrasting the image of a beautiful blossom disintegrated, with the sensory delight of food. Ashes of Roses 1989 acrylic and oilstick over silkscreen on Arches watercolor paper 40 x 26.5 in / 102 x 67 cm. Signed ‘Rene Ricard 1990’ white wood frame As an author, Ricard's increasing use of text in his work over the 1980's reflects his interest in the written word. His confessional hand-painted and hand-written poetry is almost always accompanied by the artist's outsized signature, integrated into the composition, or placed at its center, displaying the artist's unabashed confidence and flamboyance. Here, he has signed his name on the lower edge in red. This confidence (and Ricard's bedroom-eyed allure) attracted the attention of Andy Warhol, and the young Rene (formerly Albert Napoleon Ricard) became his protege. He would appear in three Warhol films, even playing the Factory founder himself in "Andy Warhol Story". Warhol would later call the famously acid-tongued Ricard "The George Sanders of the Lower East Side, the Rex Reed of the art world", and close friend William Rand called the artist “the Baudelaire of Avenue C…a brilliant, elusive and glamorous underground figure.” By the early 1980s, Rene Ricard was a fixture in the New York art scene, not only as an accomplished artist, but as a critic. Penning enlightening and poetic essays for Artforum, he turned his attention to rising stars such as Julian Schnabel and Alex Katz. Ricard famously wrote the first major article on Jean-Michel Basquiat. “The Radiant Child” is credited with launching Basquiat’s career, and is considered a seminal contemporary art essay.
  • Creator:
    Rene Ricard (1946 - 2014, American)
  • Creation Year:
    1989
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 40 in (101.6 cm)Width: 26 in (66.04 cm)Depth: 1.5 in (3.81 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    Original exhibition frame handpicked by the artist, with some frame wear.
  • Gallery Location:
    New York, NY
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU1211214014732
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