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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 5

Ed Ruscha

Schätzpreis
600.000 $ - 800.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
665.000 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 5

Ed Ruscha

Schätzpreis
600.000 $ - 800.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
665.000 $
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT AMERICAN COLLECTION Ed Ruscha Cherry 1967 gunpowder on paper 14 1/4 x 22 3/4 in. (36.2 x 57.8 cm) Signed, dated and inscribed "E. Ruscha 1967 gp" along the lower margin.
Provenance Irving Blum Gallery, Los Angeles Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1967 Literature L. Turvey, Edward Ruscha: Catalogue Raisonné of the Works on Paper, Volume 1: 1956-1976, Gagosian Gallery, New York & Yale University Press, New Haven, 2014, p. 213, no. D1967.96 Catalogue Essay "I was not totally satisfied with graphite, oil paint. And so I happened to have, just by accident, this little canister of gunpowder. I thought well that's a powder, like charcoal and like graphite, and why can't that be used?" Ed Ruscha 2004 Ed Ruscha painter of American signs and symbols, is one of the leading interpreters of language and culture. While celebrated for his vast and monumental paintings, the sublime works on paper capture the artist's longstanding devotion to text and landscape. The monochromatic gunpowder drawings, unveiled at both Ferus Gallery and Alexandre Iolas Gallery in the late 1960s, provide a panorama of seemingly simple words plucked from the common American lexicon and transposed against a misty and indefinite backdrop. White ribbons curl and twist to form words like Cherry, Crackerjack, Quiet and Sin - a cross section of the mundanities and temptations that form our common identity. Amidst the sea of these literary riddles, Cherry emerges at the forefront of iconicity: the most delectable of linguistic puzzles. Beginning in 1966, Ruscha began exploring the representational power of seemingly superficial words and phrases. As both ethereal monuments to their medium and integral compositional elements, these works aesthetically reinterpret the quotidian and commercial context of the written word. In these trompe-l’oeil pictures, three-dimensional words transcend physicality, transforming traditional text in both typeface and meaning. It is here that they emerge as artistic and subjective compositional vehicles. Ruscha breathes into these delicately rendered fonts an elevated context, securing the art historical importance of these works within the practice of an artist who has come to embody the greatness of Americana in painting. Referring to his California influence, Ruscha explains, “This idea of American culture, it's an old one. And the words and all that are just the tail end of an ancient tradition that began with man scribbling on a cave wall. I'm observing that these words, which sometimes represent objects and meanings, are made up of these squiggly little forms we call an alphabet. It's another way of looking at things, that's all." (The Guardian, Ed Ruscha 'There's room for saying things in bright shiny colours” September 2010, Rachel Cooke) The present lot, Cherry, 1967, exemplifies Ruscha’s mastery of linguistic pictorial representation and its aesthetic limits. When thrust into the American cultural landscape, this work challenges the pretense, perceptions, and power structures that dictate our epistemological interaction with the world around us. Though the theory and practice of the Abstract Expressionists dominated the artistic community at the Chouinard Art Institute (now CalArts) during Ruscha's studies there in the late 1950s, Ruscha determinedly evolved his own artistic voice. Initially inspired by Jasper Johns’s Target with Four Faces, Ruscha conjured Johns’s calculated approach to his subjects in his own work: it was Johns’s Combine Paintings that first inspired Ruscha, prior to his eventual and ultimate focus on text. In the process of juxtaposing, reinterpreting, and finally polishing words for the canvas, Ruscha looked to his environment and the uncharted commercialism in American culture-at-large. This very undertaking cemented his lifelong association with the Pop Art movement. Recalling his formal training in the field of graphic design, Cherry is a fantastical combination of the artist’s conceptual endeavors and the deliberate yet wry Pop contextualization of a bittersweet American emblem – the Cherry. Here, Ruscha’s unconventional use of gunpowder, a medium that allowe

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 5
Auktion:
Datum:
03.03.2015
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT AMERICAN COLLECTION Ed Ruscha Cherry 1967 gunpowder on paper 14 1/4 x 22 3/4 in. (36.2 x 57.8 cm) Signed, dated and inscribed "E. Ruscha 1967 gp" along the lower margin.
Provenance Irving Blum Gallery, Los Angeles Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1967 Literature L. Turvey, Edward Ruscha: Catalogue Raisonné of the Works on Paper, Volume 1: 1956-1976, Gagosian Gallery, New York & Yale University Press, New Haven, 2014, p. 213, no. D1967.96 Catalogue Essay "I was not totally satisfied with graphite, oil paint. And so I happened to have, just by accident, this little canister of gunpowder. I thought well that's a powder, like charcoal and like graphite, and why can't that be used?" Ed Ruscha 2004 Ed Ruscha painter of American signs and symbols, is one of the leading interpreters of language and culture. While celebrated for his vast and monumental paintings, the sublime works on paper capture the artist's longstanding devotion to text and landscape. The monochromatic gunpowder drawings, unveiled at both Ferus Gallery and Alexandre Iolas Gallery in the late 1960s, provide a panorama of seemingly simple words plucked from the common American lexicon and transposed against a misty and indefinite backdrop. White ribbons curl and twist to form words like Cherry, Crackerjack, Quiet and Sin - a cross section of the mundanities and temptations that form our common identity. Amidst the sea of these literary riddles, Cherry emerges at the forefront of iconicity: the most delectable of linguistic puzzles. Beginning in 1966, Ruscha began exploring the representational power of seemingly superficial words and phrases. As both ethereal monuments to their medium and integral compositional elements, these works aesthetically reinterpret the quotidian and commercial context of the written word. In these trompe-l’oeil pictures, three-dimensional words transcend physicality, transforming traditional text in both typeface and meaning. It is here that they emerge as artistic and subjective compositional vehicles. Ruscha breathes into these delicately rendered fonts an elevated context, securing the art historical importance of these works within the practice of an artist who has come to embody the greatness of Americana in painting. Referring to his California influence, Ruscha explains, “This idea of American culture, it's an old one. And the words and all that are just the tail end of an ancient tradition that began with man scribbling on a cave wall. I'm observing that these words, which sometimes represent objects and meanings, are made up of these squiggly little forms we call an alphabet. It's another way of looking at things, that's all." (The Guardian, Ed Ruscha 'There's room for saying things in bright shiny colours” September 2010, Rachel Cooke) The present lot, Cherry, 1967, exemplifies Ruscha’s mastery of linguistic pictorial representation and its aesthetic limits. When thrust into the American cultural landscape, this work challenges the pretense, perceptions, and power structures that dictate our epistemological interaction with the world around us. Though the theory and practice of the Abstract Expressionists dominated the artistic community at the Chouinard Art Institute (now CalArts) during Ruscha's studies there in the late 1950s, Ruscha determinedly evolved his own artistic voice. Initially inspired by Jasper Johns’s Target with Four Faces, Ruscha conjured Johns’s calculated approach to his subjects in his own work: it was Johns’s Combine Paintings that first inspired Ruscha, prior to his eventual and ultimate focus on text. In the process of juxtaposing, reinterpreting, and finally polishing words for the canvas, Ruscha looked to his environment and the uncharted commercialism in American culture-at-large. This very undertaking cemented his lifelong association with the Pop Art movement. Recalling his formal training in the field of graphic design, Cherry is a fantastical combination of the artist’s conceptual endeavors and the deliberate yet wry Pop contextualization of a bittersweet American emblem – the Cherry. Here, Ruscha’s unconventional use of gunpowder, a medium that allowe

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 5
Auktion:
Datum:
03.03.2015
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
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