Leslie Rankow Fine Arts

INTERNATIONAL ART ADVISORY SERVICE

Tag: Ed Ruscha

Airport, please! heading to Tokyo to Fergus McCaffrey’s exhibition Seven/Seven The Fraught Landscape

Fergus Mc Caffrey Gallery
Tokyo, Japan

This exhibition serves as a conceptual sequel to Fergus McCaffrey’s historic 2019 New York exhibition, Japan Is America. Continuing Japan Is America’s exploration of the Japanese-American creative exchange, Seven/Seven furthers this transatlantic narrative, applying a cinematic lens to the joint cultural landscape, taking its title from Akira Kurasawa’s Japanese epic Seven Samurai (1954), and the iconic Western film by John Sturges The Magnificent Seven (1960) that followed suit.

https://www.google.com/search?q=fergus+mccaffrey&source=hp&ei=XTL1Ydm7H82iptQPm6OugA8&iflsig=AHkkrS4AAAAAYfVAbQD-iYbdrsyNaJU0XewfXbPNoSAi&gs_ssp=eJzj4tZP1zesSDJKy0gyMWC0UjGosLBMNjK1SE02NjOzSLQ0NLQyqLA0MjYzSjWxMEs0TjUzNvISSEstSi8tVshNTk5MSytKrQQAjskT-g&oq=fergus+mccaffrey&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3Mtd2l6EAEYADILCC4QgAQQxwEQrwEyBQgAEIAEMgUIABCABDIGCAAQFhAeMgYIABAWEB4yBggAEBYQHjIGCAAQFhAeMgIIJjICCCY6EQguEIAEELEDEIMBEMcBENEDOggIABCABBCxAzoOCC4QgAQQsQMQxwEQowI6EQguEIAEELEDEIMBEMcBEKMCOgsILhCABBDHARCjAjoFCC4QgAQ6CwgAEIAEELEDEIMBOgQILhADOggILhCABBCxAzoOCC4QgAQQsQMQxwEQ0QM6CAguELEDEIMBOg4ILhCABBCxAxDHARCvAToICAAQgAQQyQM6BQgAEJIDOgsILhCABBCxAxCDAToLCAAQ7AMQxAIQiwM6CQgAEBYQHhCLAzoFCCYQiwNQAFiIGGDLJmgAcAB4AIABeYgBhQqSAQQxNC4ymAEAoAEBuAEC&sclient=gws-wiz

Seven Samurai

Focusing on a selection of works made by artists predominantly from 1985 to 2021, Seven/Seven considers the ways in which conscience and self-assertion manifests core concerns for both Eastern and Western contemporary artists. Departing from the archetypes of the epic and the Western, Seven/Seven contemplates the transformative process by which a sequence of static images becomes a moving film; presenting works that engage with the dynamism, drama, and individualistic nature of these genres by artists whose committed path to their craft and vision is the stuff of which epics are made.The dozen or more artists whose work is presented throughout Seven/Seven represent widely aesthetically varied perspectives on the social, political and artistic milieus of both Japan and the United States. Seven/Seven is both historical and contemporary, while remaining rooted in filmic concepts—drawing important, urgent connections between today’s most compelling Japanese and American artists.

Ed Ruscha
Japan is America, 2020

 

In this  post-pandemic era of social distancing and divisive cultural distinctions, Seven/Seven reflects the similarities and differences between the two cultures.

Artists include: Cecily Brown, Anna Conway, Milford Graves, David Hammons, Tatsuo Ikeda, Tomoke Konoike, Shigeko Kubota, Hiroshi Nakamura, Richard Nonas, Ed Ruscha, Shoji Ueda, Joseph Olisaemeka Wilson, with special screenings of Francesca Gabbiani and MAGO (screening dates to be announced)

Tokyo Gallery
Installation of exhibit

THE GALLERY

Founded in 2006, Fergus McCaffrey is internationally recognized for its groundbreaking role in promoting the work of post-war Japanese artists, as well as a quality roster of select contemporary European and American artists. Fergus McCaffrey has been instrumental in introducing post-war Japanese art to a Western market: Gutai artists Sadamasa Motonaga, Kazuo Shiraga and Toshio Yoshida; Hi-Red-Center members Jiro Takamatsu and Natsuyuki Nakanishi; and Noriyuki Haraguchi and Hitoshi Nomura from the Mono-Ha era. The gallery also exhibits the work of emerging and seminal Western artists, including Anna Conway, Jack Early, Marcia Hafif, Birgit Jürgenssen, Richard Nonas, Sigmar Polke, Carol Rama, William Scott, and Andy Warhol. Fergus McCaffrey, Tokyo opened in May of 2018.

Fergus McCaffrey
St. Bart’s

Located in New York on West 26th Street, Tokyo  in Minato-Ku, and St. Bart’s, the gallery offers impeccable examples of works that support his knowledge and depth of interest in select European and American artists.

THE EXHIBIT

Several of Seven/Seven’s artists explicitly comment on the historical— political—relationship between Japan and the United States in their work. To contextualize this contemporary framework—embedded in the historical, social DNA of both countries—outlined in this decades-spanning cross-cultural presentation, the exhibition begins with the politically engaged work of postwar Japanese artists, Tatsuo Ikeda and Hiroshi Nakamura.

Anne Conway
Mrs. Lance Cpl. shane too and Mrs. Staff sgt

Tatsuo Ikeda’s Untitled, 1957, comes out of a body of work— showing swollen, mutated animal and human figures—that the artist created in response to U.S. nuclear bomb tests in the Pacific, as well as the rapid reindustrialization of Japan in the post-nuclear era. His painting Toy World, 1967, part of a series of the same name created between 1966 and 1970, mounts a surrealist critique of changes in Japanese society following the signing of the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between the United States and Japan, which occurred in 1960, despite widespread protests. Likewise, Japanese artist Hiroshi Nakamura’s work is also deeply politically involved. Although Nakamura was trained in social realism techniques as a “reportage” painter, the paintings included in Seven/Seven, such as Drip, 1974, and Cyclope girls orgy, 1969, represent much more surrealist and pop culture-inspired interpretations of the fraught climate of postwar Japan.

David Hammons

 

Airport, please! heads to Saanen, Switzerland for Ed Ruscha’s Dedication Stones exhibition

Ed Ruscha
Destination Stones
Gagosian Gallery
Saanen, Switzerland

GSTAAD

A destination for skiers, and art collectors. Gstaad offers a beautiful environment that represents offers both physical and artistic opportunities.  From traditional papercutting to modern sculpture, paintings and objects by renowned artists from all over the world are exhibited here. The region has a further 9 chalet villages alongside Gstaad, located at an altitude of between 1,000 and 1,400 metres. Yet despite its style and class, Gstaad has remained genuinely Alpine, proud of its tradition and culture.

Tarmak 22
Gstaad Airport

Over a thousand cultural and sporting events are available to visitors every year. In addition, visitors will find first-class hotels, outstanding shopping facilities along the traffic-free promenade and a private airport in Saanen.

It was inevitable that Gagosian Gallery, with prime locations around the world: New York, Paris, London, Rome, Los Angeles, Geneva, and Basel, would seek out an exhibition space as well in Saanen, Switzerland, where international art collectors congregate. The first exhibit in Saanen was limited edition furniture by Mark Newson, at Tarmak 22 at the Gstaad Saanen private airport.

Mark Newson

TARMAK 22

Located one floor above ground level at the recently reopened Gstaad Saanen airport in Switzerland, Tarmak 22 is a new 3,000- square-foot gallery bringing contemporary art to new heights. “There are a lot of art collectors in Gstaad, but there aren’t really any spaces to organize shows and get together,” said Tatiana de Pahlen, who cofounded Tarmak 22 with Antonia Crespi, a managing partner at luxury real estate company Engel & Völkers. “There is both a tradition of artists living here — Balthus used to own a chalet in Gstaad — and a couple of well-known not-forprofit art events, like Elevation 1049, an art fair organized by the Luma Foundation,” continued the 28-year-old, who studied contemporary art in Switzerland. “We wanted to find an inbetween.” De Pahlen and Crespi visited the breathtaking space separately, and were immediately taken with the view of the airport’s landing strip with a backdrop of snow-covered mountains

Co-founders Pahlen & Crespi

Since its opening, the gallery, which takes its name both from the tarmac on airport runways and the Saanen airport code, has welcomed a mix of chalet owners, curators from established Zurich galleries and students from Lausanne. The space is open to the public, whether they are planning to travel or not, and hosts a yearly program of conferences and performances. Tarmak 22, co-run by Agnelli heiress Tatiana de Pahlen, is located  on the first floor of Saanen airport in Gstaad, Switzerland. “We’re aiming to get people to just stop by,” de Pahlen said. Following its first exhibition — a selection of grand-scale photographs by Andreas Gursky organized in partnership with the Gagosian gallery — its second event is dedicated to the extensive collection of Mexican art collector Alex Hank.

Ed Ruscha
Dedication Stones

ED RUSCHA: DEDICATION STONES

I’m interested in glorifying something that we in the world would say doesn’t deserve being glorified. Something that’s forgotten, focused on as though it were some sort of sacred object.
—Ed Ruscha

From July 16 to September 26, 2021, Gagosian presents a special exhibition of new drawings by the great iconoclastic influencer and artist of text and image, Ed Ruscha, entitled Dedication Stones. In each of the Dedication Stones drawings, which evoke sacred objects, Ruscha depicts a different short word or symbol containing the letter x. For Ruscha, x represents the ultimate variable, an endlessly adaptable surrogate for other ideas.

While Ruscha engages with the words as abstract lingual units, their cultural associations ultimately are very much present; each drawing bears a subtitle that places its subject in a specific context. Often, these display the artist’s wry sense of humor—thus Fix (Dedicated to the 1919 World Series) references the notorious baseball game-rigging scandal; XXX (Dedicated to a Jug of Whiskey) alludes to the traditional marker of triple distillation on containers of moonshine; and Xit (Dedicated to Ways Out) (all 2021) employs a deliberate misspelling.

At the same time, the gray tonality, stippled texture, classical serif fonts, and trompe l’oeil pins of the drawings suggest carved stone, evoking an association with monuments and tombstones—even as their ‘torn’ edges seem to depict paper surfaces.

https://gagosian.com/exhibitions/2021/ed-ruscha-dedication-stones/

Ed Ruscha

 

Ed Ruscha was born in 1937 in Omaha, Nebraska, and grew up in Oklahoma City. In 1956, he took Route 66 to California, which would become a central part of his story as an artist. Settling in Los Angeles, he studied art at Chouinard Art Institute (now California Institute of the Arts) and had an early job as a commercial illustrator. In the 1960s, inspired by artists like Raymond Hains, René Magritte, Jasper Johns, and Kurt Schwitters, Ruscha became a vibrant part of the art scene surrounding Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles.

Paramount to Ruscha’s work is that the changing nature of language —as its meaning shifts as a function of font, color, composition, and other visual effects—can be a subject for painting and drawing. He often revisits the same phrase or word in artworks over the course of many years. Often, his words and phrases have a vernacular, familiar tone, but an unfamiliar reference. Along the way, Ruscha teases out and accumulates new meanings from the expression. Though words typically take a secondary role in the history of art, Ruscha places language at the center of his practice, a commentator on contemporary life, especially in Los Angeles, with candor and humor.

 

Ruscha’s interest in language is frequently coupled with an interest in landscape, especially that of the American west. His words appear on road signs, buildings, and mountains, and across open skies and horizons. At times, words are strangely present through their disappearance. In early photographic work, Ruscha created documentary images and books full of swimming pools, parking lots, buildings on Sunset Boulevard, gas stations, and many other features of L.A. life. In his paintings and drawings, these same subjects combine with language to poetically evoke the changing fabric of the city through themes of evolution and destruction.

 

 

In an oeuvre spanning more than fifty years, Ruscha employs a distinctively American lexicon of images, words, and signs in works across a broad range of mediums. Presenting a litany of familiar icons including snow-capped mountains and the American flag, he applies a wry verbal and visual wit to his chosen subjects, exploring the frequent disconnect between ideas and their expression, and celebrating the beauty of what he calls “everyday noise.”

Ed Ruscha
Our Flag

Ruscha has been living and working in the L.A. area for over sixty years. Through his innovative approach to painting, drawing, and photography, Ruscha has influenced artists worldwide and is considered to be one of the most important figures in contemporary art today.

Airport, please!

The holiday season: a time for targeted giving, thanks to rare book specialist, Gagosian’s Doug Flamm

THANK YOU, DOUG FLAMM, RARE BOOK SPECIALIST AT GAGOSIAN SHOP, 976 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK, FOR BEING SUCH A GREAT DETECTIVE!

William Copley

SMS

Published by the Letter Edged in Black Press, Inc., New York, 1968

Signed by artists and edition of 100

7 × 11 inches (17.8 × 27.9 cm)

$12,000

William Copley’s SMS (Shit Must Stop) is a six-issue periodical from 1968. Each issue, in the form of a mailed box, contains assorted materials, including etchings, tapes, booklets, diagrams, constructions, Xeroxes, mail art, assemblages, vinyl and mylar sheets, and more. The six issues are preserved in their original cardboard mailers. From an edition of 100 signed copies.

Founded in New York City by artist, collector and dealer William Copley, S.M.S. was an art collection in a box, filled with small-scale, often whimsical, artworks available by subscription. Delivering art through the post offered Copley, and his collaborator Dmitri Petrov, a way to circumvent the art market and make contemporary art accessible to nearly anyone. Inspired by Copley’s mentor and friend Marcel Duchamp’s Boîte-en-valise, S.M.S. was conceived as an inter-media and intergenerational publication that would present artworks by prominent and unknown artists side by side. The magazine gathered an impressive range including the Surrealist luminaries Man Ray and Meret Oppenheim, Pop artists Richard Hamilton and Roy Lichtenstein, composers Lamont Young and Terry Riley, and an up-and-coming generation of conceptual and post-studio artists such as Joseph Kosuth and Bruce Nauman. Regardless of stature, each was paid $100 for their contribution. This egalitarian spirit extended to the communal atmosphere of Copley’s upper west side Letter Edged in Black Press loft which functioned as an unofficial hangout for many of the participants.

The six issues of S.M.S. are composed of “original reproductions”—luxurious, exacting replicas of each artist’s work in an edition of approximately 2,000. The magazine spared no expense, seeking out, and even inventing, varied and obscure production methods including Lil Picard’s labor intensive Burned Bow Tie—each of which needed to be individually singed. The enormous edition size—and the affordable price of $125 per subscription—enabled a much broader swath of the public to collect the internationally recognized artists contained in the portfolios. Ultimately short-lived, S.M.S. portfolios were mailed bi-monthly between February and December of 1968 directly to subscribers, with each portfolio containing approximately a dozen works of art.

http://sms.sensatejournal.com/

ED RUSCHA

Ed Ruscha
Babycakes
Numbered edition

Ed Ruscha

Babycakes

Published by Multiples, Inc., New York, 1970

Numbered edition of 1200

7 1/2 × 6 1/4 inches (19.1 × 15.9 cm)

$3,000

———-

This playful book created by Ed Ruscha and published by Multiples, Inc., is part of the celebrated 1970 Artists & Photographs portfolio. This classic artist’s book is encased in robin’s-egg blue wrappers with green flocked lettering and bound with pink satin ribbon, reflecting its playful title. The pages contain photographs of small pastries and cakes—a pure delight for the holidays!

After graduation, Ruscha began to work for ad agencies, honing his skills in schematic design and considering questions of scale, abstraction, and viewpoint, which became integral to his painting and photography. He produced his first artist’s book, Twenty-Six Gasoline Stations—a series of deadpan photographs the artist took while driving on Route 66 from Los Angeles to Oklahoma City—in 1963. Ruscha since has gone on to create over a dozen artists’ books, including the 25-foot-long, accordion-folded Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966) and his version of Kerouac’s iconic On the Road (2009). Ruscha also paints trompe-l’oeil bound volumes and alters book spines and interiors with painted words: books in all forms pervade his investigations of language and the distribution of art and information.

BEFORE WE  ALL DEPART TO VISIT FAMILY AND FRIENDS FOR THE HOLIDAYS, OR SETTLE IN AT HOME TO ENJOY THIS SEASON, THE LRFA BLOG WOULD LIKE TO WISH EVERYONE THE HAPPIEST OF HOLIDAY SEASONS.  YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LRFA BLOG, YOUR COMMENTS, AND SUPPORT HAVE MADE THIS EFFORT A VERY REWARDING ONE.

I HOPE ALL YOUR ENDEAVORS ARE THE SAME.

 

Dedicated to photography: an introduction to the Yancey Richardson Gallery with its director Matthew Whitworth

 

Matthew Whitworth
Associate Director
Yancey Richardson Gallery

AS AN ARTISTIC MEDIUM, PHOTOGRAPHY IS A FAIRLY RECENT NEWBIE TO THE ART MARKET. ALTHOUGH THE CAMERA WAS INVENTED IN THE MID-19th CENTURY AND WAS PREDATED BY THE CAMERA OBSCURA, PHOTOGRAPHY AS AN ART FORM WAS TRULY RECOGNIZED IN THE 20th CENTURY, EXHIBITED IN GALLERIES AND COLLECTED BY INDIVIDUALS AND MUSEUMS. CIRCA 1485, LEONARDO DA VINCI USED THE CAMERA OBSCURA TO STUDY PERSPECTIVE AS FIRST DOCUMENTED IN HIS CODEX ATLANTICUS.  THE DUTCH MASTERS, PARTICULARLY VERMEER, WHOSE ICONIC PAINTINGS ARE CELEBRATED FOR THEIR QUIET BEAUTY AND IMPECCABLE DETAIL, MADE USE OF THE PINHOLE CAMERA AS EARLY AS THE MID-17th CENTURY. NOW GALLERIES DEDICATED TO THE ART OF PHOTOGRAPHY, SELLING BOTH VINTAGE AND CONTEMPORARY PRINTS, HEAVILY POPULATE THE GALLERY WORLD ALONG WITH GALLERIES THAT EQUALLY FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY IN AN EXHIBITION PLATFORM THAT INCLUDES PAINTING, SCULPTURE AND VIDEO.

Stephen Shore
County of Sutherland, Scotland
1988
C-print mounted on aluminum

ONE OF THE LONG ESTABLISHED AND MOST DEDICATED IS THE  YANCEY RICHARDSON GALLERY THAT OPENED IN SOHO IN 1995, THEN LAUNCHING WHAT IS TODAY ONE OF THE MOST PREEMINENT GALLERIES TO SPECIALIZE IN FINE ART PHOTOGRAPHY IN THE UNITED STATES.  THE GALLERY WORKS WITH BOTH EMERGING AND ESTABLISHED COLLECTORS, MUSEUMS AND PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS. GALLERY INVENTORY RANGES FROM ESTABLISHED MASTERS OF THE 20thAND 21stCENTURY SUCH AS CARTIER-BRESSON, ROBERT FRANK, AND ANSEL ADAMS TO CONTEMPORARY AND MID-CAREER ARTISTS.

ONE OF THE MOST INTERESTING PHOTOGRAPHY EXHIBITIONS ON NOW IS BEING: NEW PHOTOGRAPHY 2018 AT THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK. IN A BEAUTIFULLY CURATED EXHIBITION OF 17 INTERNATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHERS, PAUL MPAGI SEPUYA EXEMPLIFIES THE PICTORIAL, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL CONCERNS OF ARTISTS’ TODAY, EXPLORING HIS IDENTITY IN INTENSE FIGURATIVE IMAGES VIEWED THROUGH THE LENS OF CONSTRUCTIVIST COLLAGE.

Paul Mpagi Sepuya
Figure with Poppies After RBN (2604), 2015
Archival pigment print

http://www.yanceyrichardson.com/

IN TODAY’S LRFA BLOG, WE ARE PLEASED TO WELCOME MATTHEW WHITWORTH, A DIRECTOR AT THE GALLERY SINCE 2015.

MATT, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR CONTRIBUTING TO THE LRFA BLOG WITH OUR FIRST INTERVIEW ON A GALLERY DEDICATED EXCLUSIVELY TO THE ART OF PHOTOGRAPHY.

HOW DID YOU FIRST BECOME INTERESTED IN ART? DID YOUR FAMILY COLLECT OR WHERE YOU INTERESTED IN THE PRACTICE ITSELF?

When I was a young boy growing up in New York City, my favorite places to visit (besides the Museum of Natural History) were the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim, the latter most likely because I had dreams of skateboarding down it. I liked looking at the paintings and sculptures and roaming around the great spaces. I also went to school with Frank Stella’s son Michael. He would invite me over and we’d hang out. His dad had some of his own large-scale paintings installed in their house as well as several in progress downstairs in the studio. I thought they were pretty cool, but not as much as the scale model train sets he had been working on.

Frank Stella
Whitney Museum of American Art
2015 Retrospective

My introduction to photography came from my mother. She became interested in amateur photography through her sister and set up a small darkroom when I was about 7. I was hooked instantly. Seeing images develop in the shadows of the red darkroom safelight was like alchemy to me.

WHAT IS YOUR EDUCATIONAL HISTORY AND WHEN DID YOU BEGIN TO FOCUS ON ART HISTORY IN GENERAL AND PHOTOGRAPHY IN PARTICULAR?

 My interest in photography continued throughout high school when my family and I moved to a small suburb of Boston. I was able to use the school’s equipment as well as set up a darkroom in our basement. I went to UMass Amherst for 2 years and took some wonderful art history classes, but was frustrated there because I had to travel back and forth to Smith College (as part of the great Five College Interchange program) to gain access to a darkroom and photography classes. I remembered SUNY Purchase had an active art program from my earlier college searches, so I went to visit and before I knew it, had transferred and graduated. My all-time favorite class at Purchase was “Field Trips to Museums and Galleries of New York,” taught by Irving Sandler. It was equivalent to something like “Tasting Great French Food of New York with Julia Child.”

David Maisel
Atlas
Aerial Photography

WHAT A PRIVILEGE TO HAVE STUDIED WITH IRVING SANDLER, ONE OF AMERICA’S MOST INFLUENTIAL ART HISTORIANS WHO, IN 1970, WROTE THE LANDMARK “TRIUMPH OF AMERICA PAINTING” AND, AS RECENTLY AS 2015, “SWEPT UP BY ART”.

https://www.artinamericamagazine.com/news-features/magazines/archives-new-cool-art/?utm_source=Art+in+America&utm_campaign=aff2ae75aa-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_06_05_03_40&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c7cb106f7b-aff2ae75aa-293049497

WHAT IS YOUR PREVIOUS WORK HISTORY AND WHAT PROMPTED THE MOVE TO YOUR CURRENT POSITION?

I worked at Janet Borden, Inc. for many, many years. I learned a lot but it was time for a change. YRG’s program is so relevant, topical, and growing in such an interesting way. I’m proud to be a part of it.

David Maisel
Atlas
Aerial photography
May 17 – July 6, 2018

IN OUR NEXT POST, MATTHEW WILL SHARE SOME OF THE VERY RICH HISTORY OF THE GALLERY, FROM ITS ORIGINAL LOCATION IN SoHo, TO ITS CURRENT ONE ON WEST 22nd STREET IN THE HEART OF CHELSEA.

PLEASE JOIN US!

The art of the print with Jeff Bergman, director of Pace Prints

Jeff Bergman
Director
Pace Prints

THE HISTORY OF PRINTMAKING DATES BACK AS EARLY AS THE 15th CENTURY. IN GERMANY, INDIVIDUAL PRINTS OFTEN DEPICTED RELIGIOUS IMAGES AND WERE CARRIED BY CRUSADERS ON PILGRIMAGE. FROM CIRCA 1402 TO 1425, THE FIRST PHASE OF THE WOODCUT DEVELOPED, HAND-COLORED AND INCREASINGLY COMPLEX IN WHICH SINGLE IMAGES ON A BLANK BACKGROUND EXPANDED TO INCLUDE LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURAL ELEMENTS. IN 15th CENTURY ITALY, PARTICULARLY IN THE CULTURED NORTHERN CITIES, SUCH AS FLORENCE AND MILAN, THE RENAISSANCE MOVEMENT STIMULATED ARTISTS’ RECEPTIVITY TO EMBRACE PURELY AESTHETIC AND DECORATIVE CREATIVE PATHS.

TODAY, PRINTMAKERS NOT ONLY CONTINUE TO MAINTAIN THE LEGACY OF TRADITIONAL TECHNIQUES BUT ALSO TO EXPLORE NEW INNOVATIVE PROCESSES AVAILABLE THROUGH MODERN TECHNOLOGY.

PACE PRINTS, LOCATED IN NEW YORK UPTOWN AT 32 EAST 57th STREET OFF MADISON AND IN CHELSEA AT 521 WEST 26th STREET, IS A WORLD-CLASS PUBLISHER AND DEALER FOR MODERN MASTER AND CONTEMPORARY PRINTS THAT IS A WORLD CLASS PRINT PUBLISHER AND GALLERY.

Dick Solomon
Founder, Pace Prints

FOUNDED BY RICHARD SOLOMON, IN 1968, PACE PRINTS IS A EXCEPTIONAL  RESOURCE FOR BOTH CONTEMPORARY AND MASTER PRINTS OFFERING AN EXTENSIVE ROSTER OF INTERNATIONALLY RECOGNIZED ESTABLISHED AND CUTTING-EDGE ARTISTS. PRINT EDITIONS HAS ALWAYS PROVIDED THE ART ADVISOR AND COLLECTOR AN OPPORTUNITY TO ACQUIRE WORKS BY CONTEMPORARY LUMINARIES AS CHUCK CLOSE, SOL LEWITT, ED RUSCHA AND FRANK STELLA WITHIN MORE MODEST BUDGETARY PARAMETERS.

http://paceprints.com/

TODAY, THE LRFA BLOG IS DELIGHTED TO INTRODUCE JEFF BERGMAN,  DIRECTOR OF PACE PRINTS, TO INFORM US ABOUT THIS VITAL AREA OF ART-MAKING.

JEFF, MANY THANKS FOR YOUR CONTRIBUTION. HOW DID YOU FIRST BECOME INTERESTED IN ART?

Well first off, thanks for involving me in your project!

The Aldrich Museum
Ridgefield, Connecticut

I became interested in art as a child.  My grandfather was a graphic artist for a Jewish Department Store in Midtown.  I had been drawn to visual art from an early age but my formative experience with contemporary art was at The Aldrich Museum in Ridgefield, CT.  I was a student docent there in the mid-90’s when Harry Philbrick was running the program.  He went on to run the Aldrich for many years.  He and Nina Carlson trained high school age kids to really discuss the work they saw.  We were grounded in the physical first and then went on to make our own associations.  We were handed research materials like a grown up docent was and were given an education.  I loved being in front of art and having those conversations.  I still do.

Wassily Kandinsky
Illustrative composition in
Point and Line to Plane

WHAT EDUCATIONAL STEPS DID YOU TAKE TO DEVELOP THIS INTEREST?

Beyond the Aldrich, I went to a public HS that had a surprisingly good Art History course.  After HS I went to Hampshire College in Amherst, MA and did a concentration in Art History and Theory, writing my thesis on Wassily Kandinsky’s text Point and Line to Plane.  Hampshire allowed me to craft my own course of study.  I took classes at Smith and Amherst often, utilizing resources at all 5 colleges.

Studying Kandinsky and the Bauhaus in an undergrad program alongside brilliant professors was a true gift.  Sura Levine, a brilliant scholar and a good friend to this day, was my advisor from day 1.  Hampshire had contemporary artists teaching innovative courses and I took a sprawling foundation class with Walid Raad, Jacqueline Hayden and Joan Braverman that introduced me to much of the art theory I would dive into over the next 4 years.  We were told to buy the recently deceased John Berger’s slim treatise Ways of Seeing that first day of class.

FEATURED PRINT
Kate Shepherd
Teddy 2016
Monoprint
40 1/4 x 60 1/2 inches
Unique
Published by Pace Editions, Inc.

Later I took courses with Barbara Kellum at Smith and Christoph Cox at Hampshire that allowed me to think more critically about the theory and critique of visual art.  Ultimately I was happy to ground my studies in Kandinsky’s concrete notions at the birth of abstraction.

Sol LeWitt: Prints
Installation view
September – October 2016
Pace Prints

HAD YOU ALWAYS BEEN INTERESTED IN PRINTMAKING OR WERE YOU INITIALLY DRAWN TO PAINTINGS AND SCULPTURE?  WHAT ARTISTS FIRST RESONATED WITH YOU AND HOW DO YOU EVALUATE THEM TODAY?

Printmaking was something I came to during college as I looked at the work of Bauhaus artists, and generally at the work of early 20th century art in Europe.  Initially the work that really excited me was Kandinsky’s which was always on view at the Guggenheim and MoMA and then Sol LeWitt at the Aldrich and Mark Rothko at the Tate (now Tate Britain).

My good friend Katie Commodore who is an artist and printmaker was always kind enough to let me see what she was working on at RISD so I got a sense of contemporary printmaking that way.

FEATURED PRINT
Robert Rauschenberg
Cock Sure 1993
Color silkscreen, hot wax, silver pigment dust and acrylic
Edition of 17

IN THE NEXT LRFA POST, JEFF WILL INFORM US OF HIS PROFESSIONAL HISTORY AS CURATOR, SCHOLAR AND DEALER IN PRINTS.

PLEASE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF HIS EXPERTISE AND DEDICATION TO THIS FIELD, AND ASK THIS GENEROUS GUY ANY QUESTIONS YOU MAY HAVE.

THANK YOU!

 

An introduction to Christophe van de Weghe, international art dealer and New York gallerist

Christophe Van de Weghe

CHRISTOPHE VAN DE WEGHE LAUNCHED VAN DE WEGHE FINE ART IN 1999 WITH A STELLAR EXHIBITION OF ANDY WARHOL WORKS ON PAPER FROM THE EARLY 60s.

Andy Warhol
Works on paper Installation

FROM ITS INCEPTION TO THE PRESENT DAY, VAN DE WEGHE FINE ART SETS THE HIGHEST STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE IN EXHIBITING SECONDARY MARKET WORKS BY MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN MASTERS.

IT IS TRULY A PRIVILEGE AND A PLEASURE TO INTRODUCE CHRISTOPHE, A TRUSTED FRIEND AND COLLEAGUE, TO THE LRFA BLOG. I HAVE ADMIRED HIM SINCE OUR FIRST ENCOUNTERS WHEN HE WORKED AT GAGOSIAN GALLERY AND HIS INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION AND SUCCESS HAVE FAR SURPASSED EVEN MY INITIAL CONVICTION THAT HE WOULD BECOME ONE OF THE GREAT DEALERS AND GENTLEMEN IN THE ART WORLD.

PABLO PICASSO: Works on Paper, Van de Weghe Fine Art November 7 – December 17, 2013, Installation view

THE LRFA BLOG IS DELIGHTED TO SHARE THE GALLERY’S SEVENTEEN-YEAR HISTORY AND CONTRIBUTION TO OUR KNOWLEDGE AND APPRECIATION OF THE HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF SUCH MODERN MASTERS AS PICASSO AND ALEXANDER CALDER AND CONTEMPORARY LUMINARIES AS BASQUIAT, WARHOL, KELLY AND SERRA.

http://www.vdwny.com

CHRISTOPHE, WELCOME!

YOU ARE ORIGINALLY FROM BELGIUM, A COUNTRY ALTHOUGH SMALL IN SIZE THAT ENJOYS A LONG AND IMPRESSIVE ARTISTIC TRADITION REFLECTING THE INFLUENCES OF BOTH ITS FRENCH AND DUTCH CULTURES.

WHAT WAS THE PATH THAT BROUGHT YOU FROM A CHILDHOOD IN EUROPE TO A LIFE IN NEW YORK?

I used to be a tennis player but I was injured when I was 18 ½ years old and has a serious back issue. I couldn’t play professionally for two years and had to have back surgery. I had been on a tennis scholarship at school and had traveled the whole world.

I didn’t want to go to college at all so I decided to go to California to attend Pepperdine University. The main campus is in Malibu with a 830-acre campus overlooking the Pacific Ocean. I shifted my sports to swimming and shifted my academy focus to art history. I was interested in art dealing and in the art that I viewed in museums.

DID YOUR FAMILY COLLECT ART? WHAT WERE YOUR FIRST POSITION IN THE ART WORLD? WAS IT ALWAYS IN THE GALLERY SECTOR?

My family were not collectors. My parents were divorced but my stepfather was a collector. My first job was my own business. When I returned to Belgium, I opened a small gallery by the sea, in the Belgian town called Knokke, which is located in the province of West Flanders.

Knokke was a seaside resort, a gathering place in the summer for some of Europe’s wealthiest families and attracted film celebrities such as Frank Sinatra, Maurice Chevalier and Marlene Dietrich.  The centerpiece of the town is a modern building, the Casino, that housed a wonderful mural, Le domaine enchante, a series of eight canvases that Magritte painted to fulfill a commission from Gustave Nellens, owner of the seaside Casino Communal at Knokke-le-Zoute in Belgium.

 

Rene Magritte Le Domaine Enchante Casino, Knokke

I began showing some American artists such as Ed Ruscha, whom I had met when I was in California and had become friends with the gallery dealer Jim Corcoran. Jim had introduced me to Ed Ruscha and I gave him a show in 1993. I didn’t sell anything at the time – the works were black and white with letters.

Edward Ruscha
The End #1
1993
Tate Modern

It was the early 90s and the art market was dead. The art gallery scene that flourished in the 80s was decimated by a recession and Jim Corcoran, whose gallery was the premier showcase for California artists such as Ed Ruscha, Billy Al Bengston and Kenneth Price, closed. Corcoran joined forces with the collector, Goldman Sachs chair, Robert Mnuchin, in a new gallery venture in New York, C&M Arts.

Larry Gagosian and Masa Takayama
Opening of Kappo Masa

WHEN WE FIRST MET AND BEGAN WORKING TOGETHER, YOU WERE A DIRECTOR AT GAGOSIAN GALLERY IN NEW YORK. HOW LONG WERE YOU WITH THE GALLERY AND WHAT WERE SOME OF THE PROFESSIONAL HIGHLIGHTS THAT STAND OUT FROM THAT PERIOD OF TIME?

At the time, the biggest gallery was Pace. I was interested, from the beginning, in the art market, the auctions and the New York art world. I attended a lot of sales, and would write down all the prices of the things that sold, analyzing what was selling, trying to determine why the art market goes up and the way in which it goes down. I’d always spend May and November in New York during the auction months, and one evening, at Nell’s, a popular bar/restaurant on West 14TH Street, I met Larry Gagosian.

Having just attended an auction uptown, I said to Larry, “You bought a wonderful David Hockney. I’d love to have a job with you. I think I can sell.” And he said, “Come by tomorrow and drop off your resume.”

I went by the gallery the next day and Larry looked at my resume. He told me I had zero experience, that I was a professional tennis player, but that he’d give me one month. “See what you can do”, he said. During that month, I made every appointment imaginable with potential buyers, went to every opening, and only on the very last day of the trial month, I sold a Basquiat for $50k- it was 1993. I gave Larry the invoice, put it on his desk, and said, “I’ve made a sale”. He said, “OK, I’ll give you a job at $30k a year plus 10% of the gallery profits.

 In three and one-half years, I was the top sales person. Larry had two galleries in New York, one uptown and one downtown and one in LA and had shows with David Salle, Phillip Taaffe, Warhol and Basquiat.

IN OUR NEXT LRFA POST, CHRISTOPHE WILL DISCUSS THE OPENING OF HIS FIRST GALLERY IN NEW YORK AND SOME OF ITS MANY EXCEPTIONAL EXHIBITIONS.

IN THE MEANTIME, BE SURE TO VISIT THE VAN DE WEGHE BOOTH #8 AT  TEFAF, AT THE PARK AVENUE ARMORY ON 57th STREET, THE ILLUSTRIOUS MAASTRICHT FAIR LAUNCH IN NEW YORK AND THE GALLERY.

https://www.tefaf.com/fairs/tefaf-new-york-spring

CURRENTLY, AT VAN DE WEGHE FINE ART, 1018 MADISON AVENUE, BETWEEN 78TH AND 79TH STREET, THE GALLERY HOSTS AN INSTALLATION BY THE BRILLIANT CONTEMPORARY BRAZILIAN ARTIST, HENRIQUE OLIVEIRA, WHOSE WORK CHRISTOPHE FIRST VIEWED IN PARIS. DON’T MISS IT!

Henrique Oliviera
Palais de Tokyo Installation
2013-2016

 

HENRIQUE OLIVEIRA
Drawing for the Present Installation, 2017
Van de Weghe Fine Art

Ed Ruscha’s Twentysix Gasoline Stations tops Gagosian book expert Doug Flamm’s holiday wish list

Ed Ruscha

Ed Ruscha

EARLIER THIS YEAR AT THE DE YOUNG MUSEUM IN SAN FRANCISCO, ED RUSCHA AND THE GREAT AMERICAN WEST FEATURED 99 WORKS BY ONE OF THE WORLD’S MOST INFLUENTIAL AND ACCLAIMED ARTISTS. THE EXHIBITION EXPLORED RUSCHA’S LIFELONG FASCINATION WITH THE WEST AND ITS SIGNIFICANCE TO OUR COUNTRY’S HISTORY AND PIONEER CHARACTER. THE GASOLINE STATION, AS AN AMERICAN ICON, HAS LONG BEEN AN IMPORTANT SUBJECT IN RUSCHA’S WORK AND ONE OF RUSCHA’S MOST OUTSTANDING TRIBUTES ON THIS SUBJECT IS THE ARTIST’S BOOK HE CREATED IN 1962.

 

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IN THE 1960s AND EARLY 1970s ED RUSCHA PUBLISHED SIXTEEN BOOKS, PHOTOGRAPHIC PROJECTS THAT EXEMPLIFY THE WEST COAST CONCEPTUAL ART MOVEMENT. THESE BLACK AND WHITE PHOTOGRAPHIC PUBLICATIONS, PRINTED MATTER IN MULTIPLE EDITIONS, BY RUSCHA AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES, SUBVERTED THE TRADITIONAL DEFINITIONS OF ART AS A CREATIVE SKILL AND MEANS OF SELF-EXPRESSION.

Ed Ruscha: Books & Co Gagosian Gallery July 2016

Ed Ruscha: Books & Co
Gagosian Gallery
July 2016

RUSCHA HAS BEEN CREDITED WITH REINVENTING THE CONCEPT OF THE ARTIST’S BOOK BY REJECTING THE CRITERIA OF CRAFTSMANSHIP AND THE EXCLUSIVITY OF THE TRADITIONAL livre d’artiste IN FAVOR OF AN UNSIGNED AND INEXPENSIVELY PRINTED EDITION, OPENING THIS GENRE TO THE POTENTIAL OF MASS PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION.

DOUG FLAMM, AN EXPERT IN THE FIELD OF BOOK PUBLISHING AND A PASSIONATE LOVER OF ARTISTS’ BOOKS, RECENTLY JOINED THE GAGOSIAN GALLERY TO EXPAND THE DEPTH AND SCOPE AT THE GAGOSIAN BOOKSHOP OF AN ALREADY EXCEPTIONAL INVENTORY. LOCATED AT 976 MADISON AVENUE ACROSS FROM THE CARLYLE HOTEL AT 76th STREET, IT OFFERS AN EXTENSIVE SELECTION OF SCHOLARLY MONOGRAPHS, UNIQUE CATALOGUES AND ARTISTS’ BOOKS.

 

From Twenty-six Gas Stations

From Twenty-six Gas Stations

FOR MOST ARTISTS, A BOOK SUPPLEMENTS THE ACTUAL WORKS OF ART, OFTEN ACCOMPANYING AN EXHIBITION OF PAINTING, SCULPTURE OR INSTALLATION. FOR ED RUSCHA, BOUND AND PRINTED PAGES HAVE BEEN AN INTEGRAL PART OF HIS PRACTICE FOR OVER 50 YEARS.

AS RUSCHA COMMENTED IN AN INTERVIEW WITH THE TELEGRAPH’S MARTIN GAYFORD IN 2009, “I BEGAN TO SEE BOOKS AND BOOK DESIGN, TYPOGRAPHY, AS A REAL INSPIRATION. SO I GOT A JOB WITH A BOOK PRINTER. HE TAUGHT ME HOW TO SET TYPE, AND THEN I STARTED TO SEE THE BEAUTY OF TYPOGRAPHY AND LETTER-FORMS. SOMEHOW THAT LED ME OFF ON THIS LITTLE PATH, ALMOST LIKE A BUMPER CAR, YOU KNOW.”

Ed Ruscha Twentysix Gasoline Stations 1963

Ed Ruscha
Twentysix Gasoline Stations
1963

A PARTICULAR FAVORITE OF DOUG’S, FOR YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING OR FOR YOUR ART LIBRARY ANY TIME OF YEAR, IS:

Ed Ruscha’s Twentysix Gasoline Stations (1963)

One of the most important artist books from the second half of the twentieth century, this copy of Ed Ruscha’s Twentysix Gasoline Stations includes the original wrappers, with its title printed in red ink on the front and spine. It’s the first edition of Ruscha’s first artist book, which is one of approximately 50 copies, and includes the original black card slipcase. It was published by the artist in 1963, under the imprint National Excelsior Publications.

IN OUR NEXT POST, DOUG WILL RECOMMEND SOME ADDITIONAL TREASURES THAT SHOULD PLEASE EVEN THE TOUGHEST RECIPIENT!

STAY TUNED!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tis the season! very special gifts culled from Ursus Books by Doug Flamm

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ARTISTS’ BOOKS ARE MADE AND CONCEIVED BY ARTISTS AND COME IN MANY DIFFERENT SHAPES AND SIZES. DOUG FLAMM, OF URSUS BOOKS, A NEW YORK BASED BOOKSTORE SPECIALIZING IN ART BOOKS AND ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, HAS A DEEP KNOWLEDGE OF AND PASSION FOR THIS UNIQUE AREA OF PUBLISHING. PRIOR TO JOINING URSUS,  DOUG WAS AN INDEPENDENT BOOKSELLER, DEALING IN THESE EXTRAORDINARY BOOKS THAT RESONATE WITH ART AND BOOK CONNOISSEURS ALIKE.

URSUS BOOKS PROVIDES AN INTERNATIONAL CLIENTELE WITH A COMPREHENSIVE SELECTION OF ARTISTS’ BOOKS, REFERENCE BOOKS, EXCEPTIONAL COPIES OF RARE BOOKS IN ALL FIELDS AND FINE ANTIQUE DECORATIVE PRINTS.  LOCATED ON THE THIRD FLOOR OF 699 MADISON AVENUE AT 63rd STREET, URSUS IS AN INVITING AND WELL-STOCKED NICHE WITH A WELCOMING AND INFORMED STAFF. http://www.ursusbooks.com/

IN HIS ORIGINAL CONTRIBUTION TO THE LRFA BLOG, DOUG EXPLAINED THE REVOLUTIONARY INFLUENCE THAT ARTIST ED RUSCHA HAD ON ARTISTS’ BOOKS (FORMERLY IN THE FORMAT OF LIMITED EDITIONS BY 20th CENTURY MASTERS SUCH AS PICASSO AND MATISSE, OFTEN CONTAINING AN ORIGINAL ETCHING OR LITHOGRAPHY BY THE ARTIST.)

Ed Ruscha turned this category on its head. He changed the definition of what an artist’s book is. He conceived of ideas and projects using the commonplace technology of off-set printing. He selected very banal subjects (as he does in his paintings and works on paper) – parking lots, gas stations, swimming pools, and produced these images in a rudimentary way that parallels his artistic genre. In so doing, he created extraordinary objects that don’t fall within the traditions of livres d’artiste but have a value and vitality very much their own and liberated this form of artistic invention.

 

Douglas Flamm URSUS BOOKS

Douglas Flamm
URSUS BOOKS

 

 

I WAS DELIGHTED WHEN DOUG AGREED TO GATHER TOGETHER A WONDERFUL SELECTION OF ARTISTS’ BOOKS CURRENTLY AVAILABLE AT URSUS – A MEMORABLE GIFT FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON OR A GREAT ADDITION TO ONE’S OWN LIBRARY YEAR ROUND.

 

Olafur Eliasson

Olafur Eliasson

ELIASSON, Olafur. Your House.

908 pp. Illustrated by Olafur Eliasson using computer-aided laser die-cuts. Oblong folio, 285 x 440 mm, bound in original cloth. New York: Library Council of the Museum of Modern Art, 2006. (#157176) $18,500.00

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Conceived by Olafur Eliasson as part of the Contemporary Editions series at The Museum of Modern Art, this book is one of the more exciting new achievements in book making in the 21st Century. The subject of the book is Eliasson’s house in Denmark that is rendered in a vertical cross-section through an elaborate laser die-cut process of each page. The format of the book allows Eliasson the space to fully realize his idea on a scale of 85:1, so that each leaf corresponds to 2.2 centimeters of the actual house.

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Eliasson summarizes the experience of viewing this book, “Reading a book is both a physical and a mental activity. It is like walking through a house, following the layout of the rooms with your body and mind: the movement from one room to another, or from one part of the book to another, constitutes an experiential narrative that is physical and conscious at the same time.”

Signed by Eliasson on the colophon. One of an edition of 225 copies. Condition is as new.

Born in 1967, Olafur Eliasson is a Danish-Icelandic artist whose sculptural and installation works are deeply informed by culture, ecology, and the nature of human perception. His works are inspired by his investigation of the relationship between subjective perception and natural phenomena. Perception, according to Eliasson, is as much an immediate sensory experience as it is rooted within the cultural framework of our memory.

Among the recurring themes in Eliasson’s works are light, ephemerality, and the environment. Such projects like The Weather Project (2003) in which an ecological model is placed into an institutional model frame of the Tate Modern, are fundamental rejections of object-based art. In creating environments and situations that engage our most basic sensory responses, Eliasson’s works democratize the experience of art. Participation and the act of viewing brings Eliasson’s works to life as he once explained, “I like to think that my work can return criticality to the viewer as a tool for negotiating and reevaluating the environment—and that this can pave the way for a more causal relationship with our surroundings.”

LEWITT, Sol. Complex Forms.

Comprised of four (4) large double-folded colour screenprints, 355 x 1420 mm (14 x 56 inches). Square folio, 360 x 360 mm, bound in thick paper over board, lettered spine and both covers with original colour screenprints by Lewitt. Preserved in black cloth folding box. Zurich: Annemarie Verna & New York: Brooke Alexander, 1990. (#156784) $30,000.00

Sol LeWitt

Sol LeWitt

Edition limited to 15 copies signed and numbered by Lewitt. These four original coloured screenprints printed by Watanabe Studio in New York capture on paper the amazing Lewitt series of wall paintings that the artist conceived in 1987-88. Complex Forms represents Lewitt’s experiments with fracturing the cube into component parts. The application of four colours juxtaposed in variations of hue and saturation further expands the visual experimentation.

 

A key factor to emphasize is that Lewitt’s wall paintings were executed directly on the wall for a limited duration, usually a month or two. When a given exhibition was over, many of his creations were not sold and carried away like a painting or sculpture. They were simply painted over and permanently lost except for the original drawings and/or colour gouaches.

Sol Lewitt

Sol Lewitt

“The essence of Lewitt’s work is the original idea as formulated in the artist’s mind. Because it emphasizes conceiving rather than implementing, this kind of art has often been referred to as conceptual art” (Andrea Miller-Keller, Sol Lewitt: Twenty-Five Years of Wall Paintings 1968-1993 in the exhibition catalogue of Addison Gallery, University of Washington Press, 1993, p.37). Condition is “as new.”

Sol LeWitt, whose deceptively simple geometric sculptures and drawings and ecstatically colored and jazzy wall paintings established him as a lodestar of modern American art. Sol LeWitt was born in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1928. As a child, he attended art classes at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford. LeWitt completed a BFA at Syracuse University in 1949 and then served in the United States Army in Korea and Japan during the Korean War. In 1953 he moved to New York, where he took classes at the Cartoonists and Illustrators School and did production work for Seventeen magazine. LeWitt subsequently worked in graphic design in the office of architect I. M. Pei from 1955 to 1956. During the first half of the 1960s, LeWitt supported himself by working as a night receptionist at the Museum of Modern Art, where he met future critic Lucy Lippard and fellow artists Dan Flavin, Robert Mangold, and Robert Ryman.\

LeWitt is regarded as a founder of both Minimal and Conceptual art. Inspired by Eadweard Muybridge’s sequential photographs of animals and people in motion, LeWitt incorporated seriality in his work to imply the passage of time or narrative. Two important essays by LeWitt, in particular, defined the new movement: “Paragraphs on Conceptual Art” (1967) and “Sentences on Conceptual Art” (1969). The earlier text proclaimed: “The idea becomes a machine that makes the art.” He began making wall drawings in 1968. The earliest consisted of pencil lines—in systematized arrangements of verticals, horizontals, and diagonals on a 45-degree angle—drawn directly on the walls. Later wall drawings included circles and arcs and colored pencil. LeWitt would eventually use teams of assistants to create such works.

In the early 1960s, LeWitt made paintings and reliefs before concentrating on three-dimensional works based on the cube in the mid-1960s. For these, he used precise, measured formats such as grids and modules, and systematically developed variations. His methods were mathematically based, defined by language, or created through random processes. He took up similar approaches in works on paper.

RUSCHA, EDWARD. Every Building on the Sunset Strip.

Every Building on the Sunset Strip Edward  Ruscha

Every Building on the Sunset Strip
Edward Ruscha

Accordian fold artist’s book illustrated in b&w. 8vo, wraps preserved in a new cloth box. 1966. (#105867) $7,500.00
First Edition, first printing. Photomontage showing contiguously every building on both sides of the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles.

Sunset Strip Ed Ruscha

Sunset Strip
Ed Ruscha

Approximately 22 feet long when folded out to its full length. Ruscha identifies street numbers and the names of cross streets. The folded accordion paper of Ruscha’s “Sunset Strip” has an extra 2″ flap of paper folded over behind the last page, therefore making this a true first edition. The final Jaguar building is pictured alone on this last half page. All other editions are cut evenly on the final page, including later printings that say “first edition” in front. Apparently the printer made an error in estimating the proper folding length of the printed paper the first time, but this was corrected in subsequent editions. Chip to silver mylar of slipcase and slight crease to spine of book, else a very good copy.

Sunset Strip Ed Ruscha

Sunset Strip
Ed Ruscha

Ed Ruscha’s photography, drawing, painting, and artist books record the shifting emblems of American life in the last half century. His deadpan representations of Hollywood logos, stylized gas stations, and archetypal landscapes distill the imagery of popular culture into a language of cinematic and typographical codes.  The ironic choice of words and phrases that are a dominant feature in his work draw upon the moments of incidental ambiguity implicit in the interplay between the word and image. Although his images are undeniably rooted in the language of a piercing observation of  American life, his elegantly conceived art addresses complex and widespread issues regarding the appearance and function of the world  at large and our transient place within it.

Ruscha’s artist books have proved to be deeply influential. They have widely influential other artists who have adopted their disaffected look. Their influence also extends to architects: Denise Scott Brown, Robert Venturi and Frank Gehry, who has known Ruscha since the 1960s. Inspired by the unassuming books that he found on street stalls during a trip to Europe, in 1962 Ruscha published his first artist book, Twentysix Gasoline Stations under his own imprint, National Excelsior Press. 

MORE SPECIAL ADDITIONS TO YOUR HOLIDAY GIFT LIST IN OUR NEXT LRFA BLOG.