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Richard Prince
Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #1: The Fireman, 2011

2011

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  • Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #2: The Best Friend, 2011
    By Richard Prince
    Located in London, GB
    Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #2: The Best Friend, 2011 Foil-stamped print, on heavy wove paper, folded. As new condition, never framed or displayed. Hand signed and numbered by the artist, verso. Private collection (UK). From a limited edition of 100. 6.25 x 8.5 in (15.9 x 21.6 cm) Notes: Text image from Richard Prince's iconic Jokes series. Signed and numbered by the artist in ink on interior of card. Incorporating jokes reflective of the “borscht belt” humor prevalent in the 1950's, Prince's Joke works tap into social preoccupations of the national subconscious. Prior to Prince's use of the jokes, many had infiltrated popular culture, gradually losing their original authors to become adopted by a largely oral tradition. Beginning in 1984, Richard Prince began assembling one-line gag cartoons and ‘borscht belt’ jokes from the 1950's which he redrew onto small pieces of paper. "Artists were casting sculptures in bronze, making huge paintings, talking about prices and clothes and cars and spending vast amounts of money. So I wrote jokes on little pieces of paper and sold them for $10 each". Following the hand-written jokes and subsequent works in which cartoon images were silk-screened onto canvas, in 1987 Prince adopted a more radical, formulaic strategy of mechanically reproducing classic one liners and gags onto a flat monochrome canvas. Richard Prince's work has been among the most innovative art produced in the United States during the past 30 years. His deceptively simple act in 1977 of rephotographing advertising images and presenting them as his own ushered in an entirely new, critical approach to art-making — one that questioned notions of originality and the privileged status of the unique aesthetic object. Prince's technique involves appropriation; he pilfers freely from the vast image bank of popular culture to create works that simultaneously embrace and critique a quintessentially American sensibility: the Marlboro Man...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Prints

    Materials

    Archival Paper

  • Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #1: The Fireman, 2011
    By Richard Prince
    Located in London, GB
    Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #1: The Fireman, 2011 As new condition, never framed or displayed. Hand signed and numbered by the artist, verso. Private collection (UK). Signed and numbered by artist in ink on interior of card. From a limited edition of 100. 6.25 x 8.5 in (15.9 x 21.6 cm) Notes: Incorporating jokes reflective of the “borscht belt” humor prevalent in the 1950's, Prince's Joke works tap into social preoccupations of the national subconscious. Prior to Prince's use of the jokes, many had infiltrated popular culture, gradually losing their original authors to become adopted by a largely oral tradition. Beginning in 1984, Richard Prince began assembling one-line gag cartoons and ‘borscht belt’ jokes from the 1950's which he redrew onto small pieces of paper. "Artists were casting sculptures in bronze, making huge paintings, talking about prices and clothes and cars and spending vast amounts of money. So I wrote jokes on little pieces of paper and sold them for $10 each". Following the hand-written jokes and subsequent works in which cartoon images were silk-screened onto canvas, in 1987 Prince adopted a more radical, formulaic strategy of mechanically reproducing classic one liners and gags onto a flat monochrome canvas. Richard Prince's work has been among the most innovative art produced in the United States during the past 30 years. His deceptively simple act in 1977 of rephotographing advertising images and presenting them as his own ushered in an entirely new, critical approach to art-making — one that questioned notions of originality and the privileged status of the unique aesthetic object. Prince's technique involves appropriation; he pilfers freely from the vast image bank of popular culture to create works that simultaneously embrace and critique a quintessentially American sensibility: the Marlboro Man...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Prints

    Materials

    Archival Paper

  • Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #2: The Best Friend, 2011
    By Richard Prince
    Located in London, GB
    Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #2: The Best Friend, 2011 Foil-stamped print, on heavy wove paper, folded. As new condition, never framed or displaye...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Prints

    Materials

    Archival Paper

  • Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #3: Canada Dry, Foil-Stamped Print, 2011
    By Richard Prince
    Located in London, GB
    Richard Prince, The Greeting Card Jokes #3: Canada Dry, Foil-Stamped Print, 2011 Foil-stamped print, on heavy wove paper, folded. As new condition, never f...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Prints

    Materials

    Paper

  • Anish Kapoor, Breathing Blue, 2020
    By Anish Kapoor
    Located in London, GB
    Anish Kapoor, Breathing Blue, 2020 Anish Kapoor is one of the most influential sculptors of his generation. Kapoor was born in Mumbai, India in 1954 an...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Prints

    Materials

    Paper, Lithograph

  • Ed Ruscha, He Up and Went Downtown, Porcelain Plate, 2020
    By Ed Ruscha
    Located in London, GB
    Ed Ruscha, He Up and Went Downtown, Porcelain Plate, 2020 Porcelain plate From a limited edition of 175 10.5 × 10.5 in (26.7 × 26.7 cm) NOTES: The only edition to date from Ruscha...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary More Art

    Materials

    Porcelain

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    By Viktorija Pashuta
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    "Film Noir Fashion" Original Fine Art Print by Viktorija Pashuta Original Fashion Photograph by an award-winning fashion photographer Viktorija Pas...
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  • "Mickey in time, dyptych" - Horizontal colorful Mickey photos.
    Located in Miami, FL
    A photograph done about the classic watches of Mickey Mouse, it shows the natural aging of the watch and the mouse. There is the possibility of a custom made diptych, with particular...
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  • "The Kiss" - Horizontal figurative photo with Venice's buildings background.
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    Kiss in Venice.
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  • Art Deck (2022) by artist dancer writer Katelyn Halpern; 31 color photo prints
    Located in Jersey City, NJ
    "disaster [place] Art Deck" (2022) 31 full color prints, numbered in roman numerals on the back sides, printed on 130 lb cougar finish cardstock; 6x4" cards printed with an image of each work of disaster [place] in a hand scripted envelope Deck is 6 x 4 x 5/8" Digital Print / Text / Minimalism and Contemporary Minimalist / Feminist Art and Contemporary Feminist / Artists’ Books ABOUT THIS PROJECT The "disaster [place]" installation (containing 29 charcoal works on paper) began as an itch to scrawl. “I wanted the feeling of going big and free and loose,” says Halpern. “I rolled out some craft paper on the kitchen floor, got on my knees, swept across the giant page with a screeching piece of charcoal. The sound was horrible… [but] that sweep became the first piece of disaster [place], the large brown sheet muse-hollering what I would like to say about this place is.” Over the next two years, 2019-2021, Halpern returned to the project, probing themes of multiplicity and spaces of possibility, as well as loss, softness, and localized disaster. The text-based installation grew slowly, with the addition of one word or phrase at a time, until a network of meaning emerged. An intuitive experience from beginning to end, the artist discovered the work to be complete and ready for presentation one day last August. A year later, the work is primed for its first public presentation. The development of the work received support from Arts On Site R&R in Kerhonkson, NY. The 31 card art deck serves as a memento. Halpern’s previous installations include Heartstrung: An Immersion in the Emotional Body, created with Talita Cabral for SMUSH Gallery in Fall 2018, and The Labyrinth for Reflection & the Generation of Love [No. 9], a public artwork commissioned by Jersey City’s Exchange Place Alliance in 2019 as part of their public art program. Halpern has previously shown small works at Deep Space Gallery in The Gigantic Miniature Show (Winter 2021), Mother Shipment (Spring 2021), and More Minis (Winter 2020). ABOUT THE ARTIST Katelyn Halpern is a Jersey City-based multidisciplinary artist originally from Austin, Texas. Her eclectic body of work ranges from life-sized installations to cut-and-tape zines to concert dance, and her work is frequently constructed around the idea clusters of interiority/intimacy/reflection, strangeness/humor/freedom, and the lived experience of moving through the world in a feminine body. Her creative work has received support from Dance New Jersey, the New Jersey Performing Arts Center’s Jersey (New!) Moves Fellowship, the Exchange Place Alliance, The Iron Factory, chashama, the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts, Avaloch Farm, Arts On Site Residency & Retreat, and the 2017 Choreographers in Residence Program (CHIRP) at Jersey City’s County Prep High School, among others. Her work has been presented throughout New York and New Jersey at venues including BAM Fisher, NJPAC, the Knockdown Center, White Eagle Hall, Deep Space Gallery, Eonta Space, and the J Owen...
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  • Cover Me In Sunshine (2022), linocut on paper, dark red, woman, sun, plant, palm
    Located in Jersey City, NJ
    Linocut block print on archival paper. Dark red ink. Female figure with sun, palm plant, palm leaf. Framing available. Hand signed by artist.
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  • Signed Edition by ED RUSCHA OKLAHOMA 2021 Hardcover Catalog Contemporary Art
    By Ed Ruscha
    Located in Draper, UT
    OKLA 2021 Catalog: Limited edition of 100 copies signed by artist Ed Ruscha This fully illustrated catalogue documents the landmark exhibition as installed at Oklahoma Contemporary...
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    Archival Paper

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