Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
American, 1938-2024
Richard Pettibone was one of the pioneering artists to use appropriation techniques. Pettibone was born in Los Angeles, and first worked with shadow boxes and assemblages, illustrating his interest in craft, construction, and working in miniature scales.
(Biography provided by ArtWise)
to
1
1
1
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
3
4
536
165
164
152
3
3
2
1
3
2
1
1
1
3
Artist: Richard Pettibone
Pop Art Appropriation Print: Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, Roy Lichtenstein, SIGNED
By Richard Pettibone
Located in New York, NY
Richard Pettibone
The Appropriation Print: Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, Roy Lichtenstein, 1970
(Andy Warhol's Electric Chair, Frank Stella's Empress of India and Roy Lichtenstein's Spray)
Silkscreen in colors on smooth wove paper
Pencil signed and dated 1971 on the front
Frame included:
Elegantly floated and framed in a white wood frame under UV plexiglass in accordance with museum conservation standards
Measurements:
frame: 15 7/8 x 19 3/4 x 1 3/4 inches
sheet: 12 1/4 x 16 inches
This is one of Richard Pettibone's most iconic, popular and desirable prints done in 1970 - during the most influential era of the Pop Art movement. This homage to Andy Warhol, Frank Stella and Roy Lichtenstein exemplifies the type of artistic appropriation he was engaging in early on during the height of the Pop Art movement - long before more contemporary artists like Deborah Kass, Louise Lawler, etc. followed suit. Pencil signed and dated recto. It was created in limited edition - though the exact number is not known.
More about RIchard Pettibone:
As a young painter, Richard Pettibone began replicating on a miniature scale works by newly famous artists, and later also modernist masters, signing the original artist’s name as well as his own. His versions of Andy Warhol’s soup...
Category
1970s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen, Pencil
Pettibone's Andy Warhol Cow Wallpaper, pencil signed famed appropriation print
By Richard Pettibone
Located in New York, NY
Richard Pettibone
Andy Warhol Cow Wallpaper
Silkscreen on paper
26 1/2 × 20 3/4 inches
Hand Signed and dated in graphite on the front
Unframed
Accompanied b...
Category
1970s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen
Richard Pettibone The Appropriation Warhol, Stella, Lichtenstein, Unique Signed
By Richard Pettibone
Located in New York, NY
Richard Pettibone
The Appropriation Print Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, Roy Lichtenstein, 1970
Silkscreen in colors on masonite board (unique variant on sculpted board)
Hand-signed by artist, Signed and dated on the front (see close up image)
Bespoke frame Included
This example of Pettibone's iconic Appropriation Print is silkscreened on masonite board rather than paper, giving it a different background hue, and enabling it work to be framed so uniquely.
The Appropriation print is one of the most coveted prints Pettibone ever created ; the regular edition is on a full sheet with white background; the present example was silkscreened on board, allowing it to be framed in 3-D. While we do not know how many examples of this graphic work Pettibone created, so far the present work is the only one example we have ever seen on the public market since 1970. (Other editions of The Appropriation Print have been printed on vellum, wove paper and pink and yellow paper.)
This 1970 homage to Andy Warhol, Frank Stella and Roy Lichtenstein exemplifies the type of artistic appropriation he was engaging in early on during the height of the Pop Art movement - long before more contemporary artists like Deborah Kass, Louise Lawler, etc. followed suit.
This silkscreen was in its original 1970 vintage period frame; a bespoke custom hand cut black wood outer frame was subsequently created especially to house the work, giving it a distinctive sculptural aesthetic.
Measurements:
Framed 14.5 inches vertical by 18 inches horizontal by 2 inches
Work
13 inches vertical by 16.5 inches horizontal
Richard Pettibone biography:
Richard Pettibone (American, b.1938) is one of the pioneering artists to use appropriation techniques. Pettibone was born in Los Angeles, and first worked with shadow boxes and assemblages, illustrating his interest in craft, construction, and working in miniature scales. In 1964, he created the first of his appropriated pieces, two tiny painted “replicas” of the iconic Campbell’s soup cans by Andy Warhol (American, 1928–1987). By 1965, he had created several “replicas” of paintings by American artists, such as Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997), Ed Ruscha (b.1937), and others, among them some of the biggest names in Pop Art. Pettibone chose to recreate the work of leading avant-garde artists whose careers were often centered on themes of replication themselves, further lending irony to his work. Pettibone also created both miniature and life-sized sculptural works, including an exact copy of Bicycle Wheel by Marcel Duchamp (French, 1887–1968), and in the 1980s, an entire series of sculptures of varying sizes replicating the most famous works of Constantin Brancusi (Romanian, 1876–1957). In more recent years, Pettibone has created paintings based on the covers of poetry books by Ezra Pound, as well as sculptures drawn from the grid compositions of Piet Mondrian (Dutch, 1872–1944). Pettibone straddles the lines of appropriation, Pop, and Conceptual Art, and has received critical attention for decades for the important questions his work raises about authorship, craftsmanship, and the original in art. His work has been exhibited at the Institute for Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Miami, and the Laguna Art Museum in Laguna Beach, CA. Pettibone is currently based in New York.
"I wished I had stuck with the idea of just painting the same
painting like the soup can and never painting another painting.
When someone wanted one, you would just do another one.
Does anybody do that now?"
Andy Warhol, 1981
Since the mid-1960s, Richard Pettibone has been making
hand-painted, small-scale copies of works by other artists — a
practice due to which he is best known as a precursor of appropriation art — and for a decade now, he has been revisiting subjects from across his career. In his latest exhibitions at
Castelli Gallery, Pettibone has been showing more of the “same”
paintings that had already been part of his 2005–6 museum retrospective,1
and also including “new” subject matter drawn from
his usual roster of European modernists and American postwar
artists. Art critic Kim Levin laid out some phases of the intricate spectrum from copies to repetitions in her review of the
Warhol-de Chirico showdown, a joint exhibition at the heyday
of appropriation art in the mid-1980s when Warhol’s appropriations of de Chirico’s work effectively revaluated “the grand
old auto-appropriator”.
Upon having counted well over a dozen
Disquieting Muses by de Chirico, Levin speculated: “Maybe he
kept doing them because no one got the point. Maybe he needed the money. Maybe he meant it when he said his technique
had improved, and traditional skills were what mattered.”
On
the other side, Warhol, in her eyes, was the “latter-day exemplar
of museless creativity”.
To Pettibone, traditional skills certainly
still matter, as he practices his contemporary version of museless creativity. He paints the same painting again and again,
no matter whether anybody shows an interest in it or not. His
work, of course, takes place well outside the historical framework of what Levin aptly referred to as the “modern/postmodern wrestling match”,
but neither was this exactly his match
to begin with.
Pettibone is one of appropriation art’s trailblazers, but his diverse
selection of sources removes from his work the critique of the
modernist myth of originality most commonly associated with
appropriation art in a narrow sense, as we see, for example, in
Sherrie Levine’s practice of re-photographing the work of Walker
Evans and Edward Weston. In particular, during his photorealist
phase of the 1970s, Pettibone’s sources ranged widely across
several art-historical periods. His appropriations of the 1980s
and 1990s spanned from Picasso etchings and Brancusi sculptures to Shaker furniture and even included Ezra Pound’s poetry.
Pettibone has professed outright admiration for his source artists, whose work he shrinks and tweaks to comic effect but, nevertheless, always treats with reverence and care. His response
to these artists is primarily on an aesthetic level, owing much
to the fact that his process relies on photographs. By the same
token, the aesthetic that attracts him is a graphic one that lends
itself to reproduction. Painstakingly copying other artists’ work by hand has been a way of making
it his own, yet each source is acknowledged in
his titles and, occasionally, in captions on white
margins that he leaves around the image as an
indication that the actual source is a photographic image. The enjoyment he receives in copying
is part of the motivation behind doing it, as is
the pleasure he receives from actually being with
the finished painting — a considerable private
dimension of his work. His copies are “handmade
readymades” that he meticulously paints in great quantities in his studio upstate in New York; the commitment
to manual labor and the time spent at material production has
become an increasingly important dimension of his recent work.
Pettibone operates at some remove from the contemporary art
scene, not only by staying put geographically, but also by refusing to recoup the simulated lack of originality through the
creation of a public persona.
In so doing, Pettibone takes a real
risk. He places himself in opposition to conceptualism, and he is
apprehensive of an understanding of art as the mere illustration
of an idea. His reading of Marcel Duchamp’s works as beautiful
is revealing about Pettibone’s priorities in this respect.
When
Pettibone, for aesthetic pleasure, paints Duchamp’s Poster for
the Third French Chess...
Category
1970s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Masonite, Pencil, Screen
Related Items
Jasper Johns Untitled
By Jasper Johns
Located in Washington, DC
Artist: Jasper Johns
Title: Untitled
Medium: Screenprint in colors on Patapar printing parchment
Year: 1977
Edition: 3000
Frame Size: 18 1/2" x 18 1/2"
Sheet Size: 10 5/8" x 10 1/4"
...
Category
1970s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen
Flowerball: Colorful, Miracle, Sparkle - Pop Art Japanese Flowers Colours
By Takashi Murakami
Located in London, GB
Edition of 300. Murakami signed and numbered in silver marker pen along the lower right edge.
Offset lithograph with cold foil stamp and high gloss varnishing on UV paper—diameter si...
Category
2010s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Offset
Vibrant 1975 Joe Tilson British Pop Art Screenprint, Woodblock, Colorful Print
By Joe Tilson
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen screenprint. Hand signed and numbered. A pyramid or ziggurat in vibrant colors of blue, red, yellow, orange and green on heavy paper
Joseph Charles Tilson RA (born 24 Au...
Category
1970s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen
Deborah Kass Feminist Jewish American Pop Art Silkscreen Screenprint Ltd Edition
By Deborah Kass
Located in Surfside, FL
Deborah Kass (born 1952)
Limited edition geometric abstract lithograph in colors on artist paper.
Hand signed and dated in pencil to lower right. 1973.
Edition: 102/120 to lower left.
Dimensions: sight: 16-3/4" W x 21-1/4" H. Frame: 24-5/8" W x 28-7/8" H.
Finding inspiration in pop culture, political realities, film, Yiddish, art historical styles, and prominent art world figures, Deborah Kass uses appropriation in her work to explore notions of identity, politics, and her own cultural interests. She received her BFA in painting at Carnegie Mellon University and studied at the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program and the Art Students League of New York.
Deborah Kass (born 1952) is an American artist whose work explores the intersection of pop culture, art history, and the construction of self. Deborah Kass works in mixed media, and is most recognized for her paintings, prints, photography, sculptures and neon lighting installations. Kass's early work mimics and reworks signature styles of iconic male artists of the 20th century including Frank Stella, Andy Warhol, Jackson Pollock, and Ed Ruscha. Kass's technique of appropriation is a critical commentary on the intersection of social power relations, identity politics, and the historically dominant position of male artists in the art world.
Deborah Kass was born in 1952 in San Antonio, Texas. Her grandparents were from Belarus and Ukraine, first generation Jewish immigrants to New York. Kass's parents were from the Bronx and Queens, New York. Her father did two years in the U.S. Air Force on base in San Antonio until the family returned to the suburbs of Long Island, New York, where Kass grew up. Kass’s mother was a substitute teacher at the Rockville Centre public schools and her father was a dentist and amateur jazz musician.
At age 14, Kass began taking drawing classes at The Art Students League in New York City which she funded with money she made babysitting. In the afternoons, she would go to theater on and off Broadway, often sneaking for the second act. During her high school years, she would take her time in the city to visit the Museum of Modern Art, where she would be exposed to the works of post-war artists like Frank Stella and Willem De Kooning. At age 17, Stella’s retrospective exhibition inspired Kass to become an artist as she observed and understood the logic in his progression of works and the motivation behind his creative decisions.
Kass received her BFA in Painting at Carnegie Mellon University (the alma mater of artist Andy Warhol), and studied at the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program Here, she created her first work of appropriation, Ophelia’s Death After Delacroix, a six by eight foot rendition of a small sketch by the French Romantic artist, Eugène Delacroix.
At the same time Neo-Expressionism was being helmed by white men in the late Reagan years, women were just beginning to create a stake in the game for critical works. “The Photo Girls...
Category
2010s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen
Judy Rifka Abstract Expressionist Contemporary Lithograph Hebrew 10 Commandment
By Judy Rifka
Located in Surfside, FL
Judy Rifka (American, b. 1945)
44/84 Lithograph on paper titled "Thou Shalt Not Bear False Witness against Thy Neighbor"; Depicting an abstract composition in blue, green, red and black tones with Hebrew script. Judaica interest. (I have seen this print described as a screenprint and as a lithograph)
Hand signed in pencil and dated alongside an embossed pictorial blindstamp of a closed hand with one raised index finger. Solo Press.
From The Ten Commandments Kenny Scharf; Joseph Nechvatal; Gretchen Bender; April Gornik; Robert Kushner; Nancy Spero; Vito Acconci; Jane Dickson; Judy Rifka; Richard Bosman and Lisa Liebmann.
Judy Rifka (born 1945) is an American woman artist active since the 1970s as a painter and video artist. She works heavily in New York City's Tribeca and Lower East Side and has associated with movements coming out of the area in the 1970s and 1980s such as Colab and the East Village, Manhattan art scene. A video artist, book artist and abstract painter, Rifka is a multi-faceted artist who has worked in a variety of media in addition to her painting and printmaking. She was born in 1945 in New York City and studied art at Hunter College, the New York Studio School and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine.
Rifka took part in the 1980 Times Square Show, (Organized by Collaborative Projects, Inc. in 1980 at what was once a massage parlor, with now-famous participants such as Jenny Holzer, Nan Goldin, Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Kiki Smith, the roster of the exhibition reads like a who’s who of the art world), two Whitney Museum Biennials (1975, 1983), Documenta 7, Just Another Asshole (1981), curated by Carlo McCormick and received the cover of Art in America in 1984 for her series, "Architecture," which employed the three-dimensional stretchers that she adopted in exhibitions dating to 1982; in a 1985 review in the New York Times, Vivien Raynor noted Rifka's shift to large paintings of the female nude, which also employed the three-dimensional stretchers. In a 1985 episode of Miami Vice, Bianca Jagger played a character attacked in front of Rifka's three-dimensional nude still-life, "Bacchanaal", which was on display at the Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale. Rene Ricard wrote about Rifka in his influential December 1987 Art Forum article about the iconic identity of artists from Van Gogh to Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, The Radiant Child.The untitled acrylic painting on plywood, in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art, demonstrates the artist's use of plywood as a substrate for painting. Artist and writer Mark Bloch called her work "imaginative surfaces that support experimental laboratories for interferences in sensuous pigment." According to artist and curator Greg de la Haba, Judy Rifka's irregular polygons on plywood "are among the most important paintings of the decade".
In 2013, Rifka's daily posts on Facebook garnered a large social media audience for her imaginative "selfies," erudite friendly comments, and widely attended solo and group exhibitions, Judy Rifka's pop art figuration is noted for its nervous line and frenetic pace. In the January 1998 issue of Art in America, Vincent Carducci echoed Masheck, “Rifka reworks the neo-classical and the pop, setting all sources in quotation for today’s art-world cognoscenti.” Rifka, along with artists like David Wojnarowicz, helped to take Pop sensibility into a milieu that incorporated politics and high art into Postmodernism; Robert Pincus-Witten stated in his 1988 essay, Corinthian Crackerjacks & Passing Go that "Rifka’s commitment to process and discovery, doctrine with Abstract Expressionist practice, is of paramount concern though there is nothing dogmatic or pious about Rifka’s use of method. Playful rapidity and delight in discovery is everywhere evident in her painting." In 2016, a large retrospective of Rifka's art was shown at the Jean-Paul Najar Foundation in Dubai. In 2017, Gregory de la Haba presented a Rifka retrospective at the Amstel Gallery in The Yard, a section of Manhattan described as "a labyrinth of small cubicles, conference rooms and small office spaces that are rented out to young entrepreneurs, professionals and hipsters". In 2019 her video Bubble Dancers New Space Ritual was selected for the International Istanbul Bienali.
Alexandra Goldman Talks To Judy Rifka About Ionic Ironic: Mythos from the '80s at CORE:Club and the Inexistence of "Feminist Art" Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art. She was included in "50 Contemporary Women Artists", a book comprising a refined selection of current and impactful artists. The foreword is by Elizabeth Sackler of the Brooklyn Museum’s Sackler Center for Feminist Art. Additional names in the book include sculptor and carver Barbara Segal...
Category
1980s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Keith Haring 1982 (set of 4 printed works)
By (after) Keith Haring
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Keith Haring Tony Shafrazi 1982: set of 4 printed works:
A set of four double-sided lithographic inserts from the seminal, spiral bound 1982 Keith Haring Tony...
Category
1980s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Lithograph, Offset
Keith Haring crawling baby Skateboard Deck (Keith Haring skate deck)
By (after) Keith Haring
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Vintage Keith Haring Skateboard Deck featuring the artist's most recognized & iconic image, the Crawling Baby. This work originated circa 2013 as a result of the collaboration betwee...
Category
1980s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen, Wood
Throat, from 11 Pop Artist's Volume II (hand singed screen print)
By Jim Dine
Located in Aventura, FL
Screen print in colors on hand made wove paper. Hand signed on horizontal black bar by Jim Dine. Hand numbered 78/200 lower left. From 11 Pop Artist's Volume II (Mikro 36). Publi...
Category
1990s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Paper, Screen
H 33 in W 27 in D 1 in
Kenny Scharf Tony Shafrazi gallery 1984 (Kenny Scharf 1984)
By Kenny Scharf
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Vintage 1984 Kenny Scharf Exhibition Poster:
Original Kenny Scharf illustrated exhibition poster published by Tony Shafrazi Gallery in conjunction with the Fun Gallery, New York, NY 1984. Fun, cool, vibrant original 1980s pop art without breaking the bank.
Medium: Offset Lithograph, 1984.
Dimensions: 23 x 24.75 inches (folded open).
Condition: Fold-lines as issued; good overall vintage condition.
Muralist, painter, sculptor, and installation artist Kenny Scharf (American, b. 1958) is best known for his fantastical, large-scale paintings of anthropomorphic animals...
Category
1980s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Offset, Lithograph
Dave Buonaguidi, Party Like It's 1999: Signed Screen Print, Contemporary Pop Art
Located in Hamburg, DE
Dave Buonaguidi
Party Like It's 1999, 2021
Medium: Screenprint on paper
Dimensions: 42 x 29.7 cm
Edition of 60: Hand-signed and numbered in pencil
Condition: Excellent (sold unframed)
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen
Pinocchio (Framed Pop Art Screen Print by Jim Dine)
By Jim Dine
Located in Hudson, NY
Limited edition 'Pinocchio' screen print by Pop Art icon, Jim Dine (b. 1935)
Published by Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
41 x 29.5 inches in black frame
Seven color screen ...
Category
Early 2000s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Screen
IDENTITY CRISIS (BLACK)
By Ronnie Cutrone
Located in Aventura, FL
Screen print in colors on paper. Hand signed and numbered by Ronnie Cutrone. From the edition of 150.
Certificate of Authenticity included. Please do not hesitate to ask us any further questions. All reasonable offers will be considered.
Please note our gallery has more than 1 of this artwork in stock and the exact edition number you may receive may be different than pictured.
About the artist: Ronnie Cutrone (American, b.1948) is a Pop artist renowned for his vibrant, satirical paintings...
Category
1980s Pop Art Richard Pettibone Abstract Prints
Materials
Paper, Screen
Richard Pettibone abstract prints for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Richard Pettibone abstract prints available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Richard Pettibone in screen print, masonite, mixed media and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 1970s and is mostly associated with the Pop Art style. Not every interior allows for large Richard Pettibone abstract prints, so small editions measuring 18 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Ronnie Cutrone, Bob Pardo, and Allen Jones. Richard Pettibone abstract prints prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $5,000 and tops out at $15,000, while the average work can sell for $7,000.