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Richard Prince

(United States, Born 1949)
Estimate
2 000 000 - 2 500 000 SEK
179 000 - 224 000 EUR
183 000 - 229 000 USD
Hammer price
1 750 000 SEK
Purchasing info
Image rights

The artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.

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Louise Wrede
Stockholm
Louise Wrede
Specialist Contemporary Art, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Richard Prince
(United States, Born 1949)

"Untitled (joke)"

Signed R. Prince and dated 87 on verso. Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas 61 x 45.5 cm. Edition of 5.

Saleroom notice

Provenance: Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York.

New estimate: 2 000 000 - 2 500 000 SEK

Provenance

Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York.
Per Skarstedt Fine Art, New York.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.

More information

Richard Prince is considered to be one of the most well-respected artists of his generation. He was born in 1949 and made his breakthrough in the early 1980s alongside artists such as Cindy Sherman and Barbara Kruger. Together their “appropriation art” helped to develop the American (and international) art scene. He is known around the world for his photographs and his paintings.

Richard Prince studied painting, and it was this medium that opened the door to his artistic career. However, it soon became clear that what interested Prince was the theme, not the medium or the technique.

The late 1960s saw the explosion of what we today call the 'image society', in which we still live. The sixties were the first golden age of mass media, and while some artists turned their backs on representational art and devoted themselves to metaphysical abstraction (Jackson Pollock, Helen
Frankenthaler, Mark Rothko) others sought a more effective tool. One artist who was interested in the mass media image at an early stage was, of course, Andy Warhol. However, while he was focused on its aesthetics and iconisation, Prince went in search of the human mechanisms behind these libidinous mass media and commercial images.

‘Untitled (joke)’, with a monochrome background and a joke written in a different color, is one in a series of silkscreen canvas paintings Prince produced. He began the ‘Joke series’ in 1986 and the combination of painting with burlesque humor is a clear signature of his. The jokes often involve the taboos and frustrations of the white American middle class.

Like all intelligent and perceptive art, Richard Prince’s work deciphers the state of things. If we pause for a moment to consider this, it is a mental state in which we constantly find ourselves: between a sense of lack on the one hand and on the other a strategy for attaining the goal/satisfaction – a new car, a new hair color, love, attraction, muscles, independence. We are not dealing with harmless forces here. In Richard Prince’s case there is something else that makes him more than just perceptive and intelligent. The unexpected.