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Richard TaylorPlayboy cartoon Illustration, "For Posing, My Terms Are a Dollar an Hour, Room1961
1961
$20,000
£14,986.31
€17,568.34
CA$28,009.85
A$31,394.25
CHF 16,435.32
MX$387,386.33
NOK 206,458.32
SEK 194,342.84
DKK 131,060.86
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About the Item
Put aside Richard Taylor's dry wit. Look at his masterfully rendered figures and brilliantly constructed compositions based on a two-point perspective. Clearly, he is an underrated and overlooked talent in the class of Charles Addams. Above all, Taylor, with his heavely-lidded-eyed figure, has a style of his own. An artist who has an instantly recognized style - unique to him/her is a rarity in today's artworld of derivative artists.
"For Posing, My Terms Are a Dollar an Hour, Room, and Board", Playboy cartoon illustration, page 67, August 1961
Watercolor and pen on board
15.5 x 12.5 in.
Signed upper right Unframed
- Creator:Richard Taylor (1730, American)
- Creation Year:1961
- Dimensions:Height: 15.5 in (39.37 cm)Width: 15.5 in (39.37 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:matted but not framed.
- Gallery Location:Miami, FL
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU38531882963
Richard Taylor
Richard Taylor creates in his Milwaukee Riverwest studio. His artwork is both 2- and 3-dimensional, ranging from site-specific outdoor sculpture to paintings on canvas, to the fusion of painting and sculpture. He shows in galleries across the country, and has completed dozens of commissions for corporations, hospitals and municipalities nationwide. Influences on his work include music, poetry, and urban existence. Source material varies from postage stamps, found objects and signage to alphabets, numbers and literature. He plays the saxophone and is very influenced by both jazz and classical music. He served as the artist-in-residence for Quad/Graphics, a national printer, for eleven years, painting huge murals and creating site-specific sculptures. He has taught part-time at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design, and continues to be an avid student of Art History. Travel to cultural destinations and time spent living in San Diego serve as influences on his work, as does the agricultural landscape of his native Wisconsin.

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