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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 28

Richard Prince

Schätzpreis
2.000.000 $ - 3.000.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.570.000 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 28

Richard Prince

Schätzpreis
2.000.000 $ - 3.000.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.570.000 $
Beschreibung:

Richard Prince I Went to the Doctor signed twice, titled and dated "I WENT to the DOCTOR 2003 RPrince RPrince" on the overlap acrylic on canvas 89 x 75 in. (226.1 x 190.5 cm.) Executed in 2003.
Provenance Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2005 Literature “The W Magazine Art Issue," W Magazine, November 2006, p. 340 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Richard Prince’s I Went to the Doctor combines text and painterly gesture on an epic scale that recalls the sublime canvases of the great titans of Post-War American art. Executed in 2003, the present lot perfectly coalesces Prince’s hallmark appropriation of popular culture with the sumptuous palette and “high art” handling of paint celebrated in his Nurses, conceived that same year. Indeed, in its fiery crimson palette, I Went to the Doctor is a crucial antecedent to some of the most important examples from the series, such as Runaway Nurse from 2005-2006. A testament to its pride of place in Prince’s practice, the work was the only painting presented in the artist’s feature in W Magazine’s Art Issue in 2006. I Went to the Doctor pushes Prince’s conceptual concerns further, by presenting the stacked letters which comprise his signature one-liner ablaze in golden tones that thrum against a fiery crimson background. Barely held by the confines of the canvas, the joke seems to project into our space. A rare instance in Prince’s canon, the joke begins to repeat, echoing like a blinking neon sign at a comedy club. This compositional motif stands as a dual-referent, both to the formal concerns of appropriation and to the essence the comic art form which is shared and repeated. As a result of Prince’s juxtaposition of seemingly discordant schools of art, I Went to the Doctor emerges as a contemporary palimpsest of sorts, a conceptual play on notions of abstraction in both text and image. I Went to the Doctor is a successor of his groundbreaking monochrome Joke paintings conceived in the late 1980s, which were created through Prince’s appropriation and re-imaging of jokes from what has been characterized as 'the fifties blue-collar middle America Borscht Belt'. However, I Went to the Doctor expands on Prince’s exploration of art and appropriation by presenting the joke on a canvas, which in its heroic-scale and gestural painterly application cannot help but evoke the iconic Post-War American imagery of Barnett Newman or Mark Rothko or Jasper Johns’ Numbers. With iconoclastic irreverence, Prince overlays his one-liner over a work indebted to the grand gestural paintings of the masters of American Post-War Art, and in doing so, succeeds in taking aim at the lofty concepts that defined their theories, resulting in a picture that is disarmingly resonant. The haloed letters set against the painterly depths of the crimson expanse not only recall his best Nurses from this same period, but also the idealized sunsets that foregrounded his iconic cowboys from the late 1980s. The pulsating glow from which Prince’s text emanates enables his joke to become the protagonist in this abstracted landscape, taking on an objecthood that sets it apart from the expansive painterly background. As such, Prince’s joke leaps from beyond the confines of the picture plane into our environment. And yet the joke does not act simply as a formal element from which to interrogate the limits of painting. The text is integral to our interaction with the work: as we look at the painting, we read the joke. Shared and repeated, the presence of the viewer brings Prince’s joke to its ultimate fruition. This tension between the physical properties of the work and its psychological effect lies at the heart of Prince’s artistic practice. In combining these various visual tools, Prince plays with notions of identity and authorship, concepts which have underpinned the artist’s entire oeuvre. While this particular joke is known to have originated with Henny Youngman, "The King of the One Liners", the source is not as important as the essential truth it captures about popular culture. In many ways, this specific joke combines some of the most central motifs interrogated in his pr

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 28
Auktion:
Datum:
16.11.2016
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Richard Prince I Went to the Doctor signed twice, titled and dated "I WENT to the DOCTOR 2003 RPrince RPrince" on the overlap acrylic on canvas 89 x 75 in. (226.1 x 190.5 cm.) Executed in 2003.
Provenance Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2005 Literature “The W Magazine Art Issue," W Magazine, November 2006, p. 340 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Richard Prince’s I Went to the Doctor combines text and painterly gesture on an epic scale that recalls the sublime canvases of the great titans of Post-War American art. Executed in 2003, the present lot perfectly coalesces Prince’s hallmark appropriation of popular culture with the sumptuous palette and “high art” handling of paint celebrated in his Nurses, conceived that same year. Indeed, in its fiery crimson palette, I Went to the Doctor is a crucial antecedent to some of the most important examples from the series, such as Runaway Nurse from 2005-2006. A testament to its pride of place in Prince’s practice, the work was the only painting presented in the artist’s feature in W Magazine’s Art Issue in 2006. I Went to the Doctor pushes Prince’s conceptual concerns further, by presenting the stacked letters which comprise his signature one-liner ablaze in golden tones that thrum against a fiery crimson background. Barely held by the confines of the canvas, the joke seems to project into our space. A rare instance in Prince’s canon, the joke begins to repeat, echoing like a blinking neon sign at a comedy club. This compositional motif stands as a dual-referent, both to the formal concerns of appropriation and to the essence the comic art form which is shared and repeated. As a result of Prince’s juxtaposition of seemingly discordant schools of art, I Went to the Doctor emerges as a contemporary palimpsest of sorts, a conceptual play on notions of abstraction in both text and image. I Went to the Doctor is a successor of his groundbreaking monochrome Joke paintings conceived in the late 1980s, which were created through Prince’s appropriation and re-imaging of jokes from what has been characterized as 'the fifties blue-collar middle America Borscht Belt'. However, I Went to the Doctor expands on Prince’s exploration of art and appropriation by presenting the joke on a canvas, which in its heroic-scale and gestural painterly application cannot help but evoke the iconic Post-War American imagery of Barnett Newman or Mark Rothko or Jasper Johns’ Numbers. With iconoclastic irreverence, Prince overlays his one-liner over a work indebted to the grand gestural paintings of the masters of American Post-War Art, and in doing so, succeeds in taking aim at the lofty concepts that defined their theories, resulting in a picture that is disarmingly resonant. The haloed letters set against the painterly depths of the crimson expanse not only recall his best Nurses from this same period, but also the idealized sunsets that foregrounded his iconic cowboys from the late 1980s. The pulsating glow from which Prince’s text emanates enables his joke to become the protagonist in this abstracted landscape, taking on an objecthood that sets it apart from the expansive painterly background. As such, Prince’s joke leaps from beyond the confines of the picture plane into our environment. And yet the joke does not act simply as a formal element from which to interrogate the limits of painting. The text is integral to our interaction with the work: as we look at the painting, we read the joke. Shared and repeated, the presence of the viewer brings Prince’s joke to its ultimate fruition. This tension between the physical properties of the work and its psychological effect lies at the heart of Prince’s artistic practice. In combining these various visual tools, Prince plays with notions of identity and authorship, concepts which have underpinned the artist’s entire oeuvre. While this particular joke is known to have originated with Henny Youngman, "The King of the One Liners", the source is not as important as the essential truth it captures about popular culture. In many ways, this specific joke combines some of the most central motifs interrogated in his pr

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 28
Auktion:
Datum:
16.11.2016
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
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