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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 9

Ed Ruscha

Schätzpreis
1.500.000 $ - 2.500.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
2.405.000 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 9

Ed Ruscha

Schätzpreis
1.500.000 $ - 2.500.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
2.405.000 $
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN COLLECTION Ed Ruscha Higher Standards / Lower Prices 2007 diptych, acrylic on canvas each 48 1/8 x 110 1/8 in. (122.2 x 279.7 cm.) overall 48 1/8 x 220 1/8 in. (121.9 x 559.1 cm.) Signed, titled and dated “‘HIGHER STANDARDS’ Ed Ruscha 2007" on left panel; further signed, titled and dated "‘LOWER PRICES’ Ed Ruscha 2007” on right panel. Registered with the Edward Ruscha studio number P2007.18 on a label affixed to the reverse.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, London Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, The Halsey Minor Collection, May 13, 2010, lot 7 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Ed Ruscha Paintings, exh. cat., Gagosian Gallery, London, 2008, n.p (illustrated) This work will be included in a forthcoming volume of Edward Ruscha: Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings. Catalogue Essay "I was searching for a title and I saw this slogan on a grocery truck in LA . In the second of the two paintings these buildings suddenly shoot up out of nowhere like an instant industrial village of Wal-Marts and Costcos—so that says to me lower prices. But then you have your higher standards—there’s some serious geology going on in those mountains." - Ed Ruscha 2007 (O. Ward, “Ed Ruscha: Interview,” Time Out, London, 2007) Ed Ruscha’s approach to painting has always centered on the particularities of sensory contrast, be it the reflexive nature of juxtaposed word and image, the difference between the real and the artificial, or the interaction of the cinematic and the mundane. Yet his thematic roots have always brought him back to the wonders of Americana; his paintings serve as studies in perception rooted in a decidedly unique sensibility, teasing out our admiration and fascination at the sight of our most treasured landscapes manipulated. In addition, Ruscha’s keen observational skills make him a subtle manipulator, adding elements to his works of natural beauty that provoke unforeseeable sentiments in the viewer. In a nod to his first great masterpiece, Standard Station, 1963, Ruscha presents us with the present lot as a continuation of his visual puns, incorporating the title as a symbol for his serious humor—Higher Standards/Lower Prices has all the key features of a Ruscha masterpiece: grandeur, wry commentary and most tellingly, a visual twist that evokes a new conversation about painting. In its nearly flawless portrayal of alpine wonder, Higher Standards/Lower Prices, 2007, is positioned within an oeuvre that has documented the most sublime and the most quotidian elements of the American landscape. From his earliest efforts, Ruscha has concentrated much effort at pairing text and daring natural visuals, opening a space that synthesizes the sensorial experience at the interplay of the two. His unique and jarring pairings highlight consumerism’s ready placement at the center of the American experience. In the past fifteen years, Ruscha’s concentration on mountains in particular has come to represent a turning point for the artist, exploring the most majestic of natural wonders while utilizing them for his own experiments in perception. Ruscha has testified to his actual portrayal of these natural phenomena in paintings: “The mountains emerged from my connection to landscape, and experiencing it, and especially from driving across country. In the western half of the United States mountains just erupt from this flat landscape. They’re based on specific mountains and alterations and photographs, but they’re not really mountains in the sense that a naturalist would paint a picture of a mountain. They’re ideas of mountains, picturing some sort of unobtainable bliss or glory—rock and ways to fall, dangerous and beautiful” (A. Gopnik, “Bones in the Ice Cream,” Ed Ruscha Paintings, Toronto, 2002, p. 7). Indeed, Higher Standards/Lower Prices displays a visual dynamic that hints at a pair of almost fantastically independent mountains, refusing to adhere to the norms of topographic reality. Ruscha’s diptych bears an initial visual power of a continuous chain of rocky, snow-capped cliffs, rising perhaps three miles above their surrounding terrain. Against a misty gray backdrop, and crafted with the precision of Ruscha’s mechanized paint gun, his mountains bear all of the grandeur of their eponymous anthem. Yet the left panel shows us the mountains in an unaltered state, allowing the morning sun to strike them from their venous bases to their wintry peak

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 9
Auktion:
Datum:
11.11.2013
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN COLLECTION Ed Ruscha Higher Standards / Lower Prices 2007 diptych, acrylic on canvas each 48 1/8 x 110 1/8 in. (122.2 x 279.7 cm.) overall 48 1/8 x 220 1/8 in. (121.9 x 559.1 cm.) Signed, titled and dated “‘HIGHER STANDARDS’ Ed Ruscha 2007" on left panel; further signed, titled and dated "‘LOWER PRICES’ Ed Ruscha 2007” on right panel. Registered with the Edward Ruscha studio number P2007.18 on a label affixed to the reverse.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, London Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, The Halsey Minor Collection, May 13, 2010, lot 7 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Ed Ruscha Paintings, exh. cat., Gagosian Gallery, London, 2008, n.p (illustrated) This work will be included in a forthcoming volume of Edward Ruscha: Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings. Catalogue Essay "I was searching for a title and I saw this slogan on a grocery truck in LA . In the second of the two paintings these buildings suddenly shoot up out of nowhere like an instant industrial village of Wal-Marts and Costcos—so that says to me lower prices. But then you have your higher standards—there’s some serious geology going on in those mountains." - Ed Ruscha 2007 (O. Ward, “Ed Ruscha: Interview,” Time Out, London, 2007) Ed Ruscha’s approach to painting has always centered on the particularities of sensory contrast, be it the reflexive nature of juxtaposed word and image, the difference between the real and the artificial, or the interaction of the cinematic and the mundane. Yet his thematic roots have always brought him back to the wonders of Americana; his paintings serve as studies in perception rooted in a decidedly unique sensibility, teasing out our admiration and fascination at the sight of our most treasured landscapes manipulated. In addition, Ruscha’s keen observational skills make him a subtle manipulator, adding elements to his works of natural beauty that provoke unforeseeable sentiments in the viewer. In a nod to his first great masterpiece, Standard Station, 1963, Ruscha presents us with the present lot as a continuation of his visual puns, incorporating the title as a symbol for his serious humor—Higher Standards/Lower Prices has all the key features of a Ruscha masterpiece: grandeur, wry commentary and most tellingly, a visual twist that evokes a new conversation about painting. In its nearly flawless portrayal of alpine wonder, Higher Standards/Lower Prices, 2007, is positioned within an oeuvre that has documented the most sublime and the most quotidian elements of the American landscape. From his earliest efforts, Ruscha has concentrated much effort at pairing text and daring natural visuals, opening a space that synthesizes the sensorial experience at the interplay of the two. His unique and jarring pairings highlight consumerism’s ready placement at the center of the American experience. In the past fifteen years, Ruscha’s concentration on mountains in particular has come to represent a turning point for the artist, exploring the most majestic of natural wonders while utilizing them for his own experiments in perception. Ruscha has testified to his actual portrayal of these natural phenomena in paintings: “The mountains emerged from my connection to landscape, and experiencing it, and especially from driving across country. In the western half of the United States mountains just erupt from this flat landscape. They’re based on specific mountains and alterations and photographs, but they’re not really mountains in the sense that a naturalist would paint a picture of a mountain. They’re ideas of mountains, picturing some sort of unobtainable bliss or glory—rock and ways to fall, dangerous and beautiful” (A. Gopnik, “Bones in the Ice Cream,” Ed Ruscha Paintings, Toronto, 2002, p. 7). Indeed, Higher Standards/Lower Prices displays a visual dynamic that hints at a pair of almost fantastically independent mountains, refusing to adhere to the norms of topographic reality. Ruscha’s diptych bears an initial visual power of a continuous chain of rocky, snow-capped cliffs, rising perhaps three miles above their surrounding terrain. Against a misty gray backdrop, and crafted with the precision of Ruscha’s mechanized paint gun, his mountains bear all of the grandeur of their eponymous anthem. Yet the left panel shows us the mountains in an unaltered state, allowing the morning sun to strike them from their venous bases to their wintry peak

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 9
Auktion:
Datum:
11.11.2013
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
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