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Friday, August 8, 2025 |
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Richard Prince opens exhibition at Almine Rech Gallery in Paris |
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Richard Prince, View of the exhibition New Figures, 20.10 20.12.14 at Almine Rech Gallery,Paris© Rebecca Fanuele. Courtesy of the artist / Almine Rech Gallery.
By: Jeff Rian
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PARIS.- Born in the Panama Canal Zone in 1949, Richard Princes remarkable artistic trajectory began during Americas bicentennial, 1976, when Jimmy Carter was running for President and New York City was bankrupt. Living in a small East Village apartment he shot slides of advertisements without the blurb copy, and cataloged these commercial gestures as anthropological types: mixed couples, girlfriends, cowboys, etc. He used male escapist commercial art forms like jokes, sex cartoons, drag racing, and girly pictures, some of those from his carefully bought collection of pulp fiction novels. His blown up and framed rephotographs, as he called them, were shocking and unexpected artworks, and as puzzling as they were compelling. And this was the tip of an unfathomable artistic iceberg that would emerge. In the early 1980s he surprised us with his meticulously redrawn magazine cartoons, which were stylistically related to the rephotographs. No one thought he could drawor paint! Then came silk-screens paintings of jokes and cartoons, hand-painted B-girl (bar girl) nurses, minimalist styled sculptures constructed from custom car parts, and the countless collages pieced together from found images, now including just after his extraordinary exhibition at Kunsthaus Bregenzthe scanned and over-drawn and collaged New Figures and Cutouts.
The found photographs in the Cutouts and New Figures evoke the sex pictures mothers once called dirty, but whose children would become the social revolutionaries of the Woodstock Generation; the drawn lines, pale colors, and collaged shapes look back further to Picassos elegant lines and Matisses scissor snipped collages, before American art went Pop and life turned electronic. Some of the girls are covered with drawn bodies, anothers arms morph into geometric or schematic appendages in a freehand combination of image, design, and drawing. They also reveal an artistperhaps the best of his generation with the technical and artistic freedom to create an unexpected art from an earlier eras techniques into one that is easily as good and yet wholly contemporary.
Early on Richard Prince explained his rephotographs with an alteration of American poet Ezra Pounds modernist dictum, circa 1914, Make It New, in the phrase, circa 1980, make it again. Pounds it expressed a modernists fedupness with tradition; Richards referred to modernisms newness seen through the lens the television and space age. He always looked for subjects that hadnt been co opted by art, like jokes, car parts, and B-girls, then creating memory images with familiar photographs and objects as if someone or something else had made them. He made it look easy and natural, which is what television watchers and moviegoers wanted: an art made with the casual élan of Zorro sword-tickling a Z on Sargent Garcias blouse; an art that combined originality and the suspension of belief as in films special effects. The New Figures and Cutouts combine ease, confidence, and special effects. More than that, they project a more complex and more diffident ego from Matisse or Picassos, in a manner more complex than their pictorially reductive modernism. Richard achieves newness using todays complex imaging methods. Recently he said to me, Ive been incredibly lucky when it comes to making exactly what I want. Im always surprised at how well he draws, but particularly how seductively he can get into our complex minds.
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