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Richard Prince: Original – Gagosian Gallery, 2015

RICHARD PRINCE, Untitled (original) (detail)

RICHARD PRINCE, Untitled (original) (detail), 2010
original illustration and paperback book
45 × 40 inches (114.3 × 101.6 cm)
Photo by Rob McKeever

Richard Prince: Original – Gagosian Gallery, 2015 Gagosian Gallery New York presents Richard Prince’s’ Untitled (original)’ series. April 9 – June 20, 2015.]]>

Source: Gagosian Gallery

An avid yet assiduous collector, Prince has amassed an unrivaled library, which was the subject of the major exhibition “Richard Prince: American Prayer” at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in 2011. The core of Prince’s collection comprises rare and iconic books, manuscripts, letters, and contemporary art from the beat, hippie, pulp, and punk eras. It begins in 1949, the year of his birth and the same year that George’s Orwell’s “1984” —the first rare book he ever bought at auction— was published. Prince often blurs the line between his art and his collecting: nurse paperbacks were the impetus for the Nurse paintings (2002–08), while the composite variations on de Kooning’s Women began with collaging and painting over reproductions in an exhibition catalogue.

Many of Prince’s Untitled (original) works (2000–) pair vintage adult novels with the original artworks for their covers: each “diptych” shows the transformation from painting or drawing to printed jacket. His meticulous assembling of these related artifacts is evidence of a passionate bibliophilia. Among the illustrated subjects are a cowboy’s hat and holster draped over a makeshift grave for the novel “Massacre Trail”; a female nurse twirling a flower in front of a towering wave (Surfing Nurse); and a woman smoking in an untidy apartment (Reefer Girl). In a Hollywood twist, an illustration of the late actor Charles Bronson as a cowboy is accompanied by his autographed photographic portrait and three canceled checks. Some of the original works are signed by the artists, alluding to the fact that Prince has gone one step beyond his own strategy of appropriation, turning authorship on its head by dissolving the boundary between creator and collector.

Mining images from mass media, advertising and entertainment, Prince has continuously redefined authorship and ownership as they relate to contemporary art. As an employee at Time-Life Inc. during the 1970s and early 1980s, he was captivated by the contrived glamour of magazine ads for jewelry, furniture, and fashion. He began to re-photograph these images of what he described as “social science fiction,” cropping them, removing text, and grouping them by subject. Such appropriative processes have remained at the heart of his all-consuming work. In deadpan paintings, photographs, and sculptures, Prince has probed the depths of racism, sexism, and psychosis in mainstream humor; the mythical status of cowboys, bikers, customized cars, and celebrities; and the push-pull allure of pulp fiction, soft porn and, most recently, social media.

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Richard Prince at Gagosian Gallery (exhibition, 2008)

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Richard Prince: Original - Gagosian Gallery, 2015