Richard Prince
|
| List Price: | $60.00 |
| Price: | $37.80 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
41 new or used available from $29.99
Average customer review:Product Description
For 30 years now, the American artist Richard Prince has been considered one of the most forward-thinking and innovative artists in the world. In 1977, his deceptively simple act of re-photographing advertising images from The New York Times Magazine and presenting them as his own ushered in an entirely new, critical approach to making art--one that questioned notions of originality and the privileged status of the unique aesthetic object. Prince's technique involves appropriation, and he pilfers freely from the vast image bank of popular culture to create works that simultaneously embrace and critique a quintessentially American sensibility, with images stemming from the Marlboro Man, muscle cars, biker chicks, off-color jokes, gag cartoons and pulp fiction novels, among many other sources. Organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, this major traveling retrospective brings together Prince's photographs, paintings, sculptures and works on paper in the most comprehensive examination of his work to date. While previous examinations of Prince's work have emphasized its catalytic role in Postmodernist criticism, this volume also focuses on the work's iconography and how it registers prevalent themes in our social landscape, including a fascination with rebellion, an obsession with fame and a preoccupation with the tawdry and the illicit. Highlighting key examples from the all the major series of Prince's oeuvre, this fully illustrated volume also debuts works created specifically for the exhibition. It features a critical overview by the Guggenheim Museum's Nancy Spector and an essay by Artforum Editor-at-Large Jack Bankowsky, which discusses Prince's environmental installations, including the Spiritual America Gallery, his First House and Second House, and his Library in Upstate New York. In addition, cultural commentator Glenn O'Brien contributes a series of interviews with popular culture initiators like Annie Proulx, Phyllis Diller, John Waters, Michael Ovitz, Kim Gordon and Robert Mankoff, among many others, providing a composite portrait of Prince's themes alongside an insider's view of the formation of mass-cultural taste.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #147029 in Books
- Published on: 2007-10-01
- Released on: 2007-10-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 368 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Rosetta Brooks (Survey) is an art critic and curator based in Pioneertown, California. She is currently a Core Faculty member of the MA 'Art Criticism and Cultural Theory' course at the Art Center, College of Design, Pasadena, California. Formerly editor of the London-based ZG magazine, Brooks authored Richard Prince's 1992 catalogue for the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and has written on such artists as Edward Kienholz, Robert Rauschenberg, Sigmar Polke and Victor Burgin. Author's Residence: Pioneertown, California Jeff Rian (Interview) is a writer and professor at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Nimes. He is an editor of Purple magazine and the author of Buckshot Lexicon (2000) and Lewis Baltz (Phaidon 55s, 2001). Rian contributes regularly to Art in America and Flash Art magazines. Author's Residence: Paris Luc Sante (Focus), is the author of Low Life (1991), Evidence (1992), The Factory of Facts (1998), and Walker Evans (Phaidon 55s, 2001), and is co-editor of OK You Mugs: Writers on Movie Actors (1999). He teaches writing and the history of photography at Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. Author's Residence: Kingston, New York For his Artist's Choice, Richard Prince is the first artist in the Contemporary Artists series to select song lyrics: Fallen for You (1992) by Shiela Nicholls, a young and little-known singer/songwriter from Essex, England, now based in Los Angeles. Richard Prince is a talented writer, noted for his understated humour and dry style. The lengthy Artists Writings include examples of his fiction (among them, 'The Velvet Wall' 1993, a love story), confessions of a serial junk collector ('Bringing It All Back Home', 1988) and interviews with figures ranging from the novelist J.G. Ballard to artist Barbara Kruger. Artist's Residence: Renssalaerville, New York
Customer Reviews
A princely catalogue
Since I will not be lucky enough to see the exhibition at the Guggenheim, I am very happy to be able to say that this is one of the best art books I have ordered so far. It lists and illustrates the bulk of Prince's major series (the original ad pictures from the 1970's, stripped of all text, the cowboy photos,the joke paintings, the nurse paintings,the latest 2006 "De Kooning" paintings which are a complete discovery, and many more). The illustrations are wonderful and do justice to the scope and depth of the artist's oeuvre.
The book starts with an enlightening essay by curator Nancy Spector who shows how Prince's appropriation art resulted in one of the most profound analyses of contemporary American culture. Another valuable chapter of the book is a collection of interviews of various personalities (collectors, intellectuals, magazine editors, writers, cartoonists...)who have been in some way or other in contact with Richard Prince and his works and who give their own often sensible and knowledgeable opinion on it.
Highly recommended.
Excellent Survey
This is a comprehensive overview of Richard Prince's artwork to date and shows him as one of the most important and enduring artists from the 1980's. A child of Warhol, Richard Prince has taken pop art and conceptual art to the next progression and has made the art world rethink our notions of what art is.
Cool guy, interesting work.
The book is pretty decent but pricey. Multiple languages are a pain in the neck.




