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Kerry James Marshall
May 15 2001, signed/N iconic silkscreen by famed African American artist Framed

2003

$25,000
£18,988.12
€21,937.55
CA$35,038.40
A$39,214.56
CHF 20,466.99
MX$478,215.53
NOK 261,949.59
SEK 247,968.83
DKK 163,717.01
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About the Item

Kerry James Marshall May 15, 2001, 2003 Four color silkscreen on Arches 88 paper Pencil signed, dated and numbered 39/60 on the front. Bears printer's blind stamp Vintage frame included Pencil signed, dated and numbered from the edition of 60 on the front. Bears printer's blind stamp Accompanied by xerox copy of the publishers' colophon page (see attached jpeg) Published by the College Art Association, NY. Printed by the Brodsky Center for Innovative Editions, NY, with the blind stamp lower left. Rarely seen on the market, this the highly collectible Kerry James Marshall graphic work published by the College Art Association and printed at the Brodsky Center for Innovative Printmaking at Rutgers, done in collaboration with master printer Randy Hemminghaus. Created in 2003, this work represents themes relating to the commodification of art that would preoccupy the artist, and that he would reprise over the next two decades, culminating in his internationally acclaimed 2018 "History of Painting (May 16, 2007). (It didn't hurt that P Diddy snagged one of his paintings at auction for over $21 million.) The present work, "May 15, 2001 resembles a grocery store’s advertising circular. Instead of depicting vegetables or canned goods, Kerry James Marshall “advertises” works by modern and contemporary artists, along with their auction prices, from a sale at Sotheby’s held on May 15, 2001. Like all of Marshall’s work, this image percolates with embedded references to the African American experience and the traditions of art history: the names of Caucasian artists and artists of color are intermingled and some are occluded; salient at upper left is a blurry, iconic little reproduction of Jeff Koons’s garish gilt ceramic portrait of Michael Jackson and his pet monkey, Michael Jackson and Bubbles (1988), from that artist’s Banality series. The figure, racially ambiguous and ambiguously parodic, sets off a sequence of reverberations that ripple through the image: Koons to Lichtenstein to Warhol to Pollock; Jackson to Basquiat to Puryear to Gallagher. Black and white artists intermingle, their values declared in fat, deadpan numbers and their boldface names claiming the visual space once granted to images. In this context, Basquiat’s tiny black silhouette Furious Man (1982) appears in skeptical dialogue with Koons’s more placid sculpture. In keeping with one of Marshall’s long standing preoccupations, May 15, 2001 makes layered references to art history. The artist slyly acknowledges the critical interventions of Hans Haacke and the Guerrilla Girls, who have harshly interrogated the financial underpinnings of the art world, and provides a tongue-in-cheek commentary on Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup cans, now temporarily restored to their original nonart place on the shelves of the American supermarket. In 2007, Marshall reprised this theme yet again: "..a group of paintings takes as its subject the way in which artworks are exchanged, emphasizing their ultimate fate as commodity. Appropriating the format of the supermarket circular, Marshall replaces the everyday goods that would ordinarily be promoted on such fliers with auction results, each from a different auction house and day in early 2007, when the market had reached an apex. One painting depicts results from Swann Auction Galleries, notably one of the only houses to offer a sale of African American artists, while others make evident the relative absence of women from such contexts. Embedded within is a series of purely aesthetic formal choices that are in direct contrast with their content—for example, the invocation of color theory or a riff on neo-plastic composition that unconsciously affects the lens through which these works are seen. Titled History of Painting, they call attention to how value is created and assigned and how it influences the writing of history." - courtesy David Zwirner press release for "History of Painting", October, 2018. (In December of 2018, Marshall revisited this imagery of auction prices in his exhibition Kerry James Marshall: History of Painting at David Zwirner, London)
  • Creator:
    Kerry James Marshall (1955, American)
  • Creation Year:
    2003
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 30.5 in (77.47 cm)Width: 25.5 in (64.77 cm)Depth: 1.25 in (3.18 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    Not examined outside of original vintage wood frame, but appears to be in excellent condition. (frames not guaranteed).
  • Gallery Location:
    New York, NY
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU1745216651032

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