Richard Prince, print, Jokes

Punchlines: 18 Jokes by Richard Prince Online Auction: 8-15 December 2023 • 10:00 AM EST • New York Overview Lots Auction Details Conditions of Business S otheby's is pleased to present Punchlines: 18 Jokes by Richard Prince, which brings together the artist's witty and provocative typed-out gags. Richard Prince - Monochromatic Jokes. T-Shirts. When I was 15, 1989. Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas. 56 x 48 inches. 142.2 x 121.9 cm. All I've Heard, 1989. Acrylic on silkscreen on canvas. 75 x 58 inches.

Richard Prince, print, Jokes

Sotheby's is pleased to present Punchlines: 18 Jokes by Richard Prince, which brings together the artist's witty and provocative typed-out gags. Hailing from the 1980s and 90s, the present studies for Prince's deadpan jokes feature his personal notes scrawled in pencil and ink, with spelling errors, crossed out lines, and scribbles intact. As celebrated in this online-only auction. Richard Prince. 90 Jokes. Karma, 2017 Jokes 9 available All Filters Rarity Medium Price Range Sort: Recommended 33 Artworks: Richard Prince "joke drawing, Nancy to her Girlfriend.", 1989 De Zutter Art Gallery €40,000-€60,000 Richard Prince Working Proof.Joke, 1986 Caviar20 Sold Richard Prince Black Jokes, 1992 Phillips Bidding closed Richard Prince Untitled (Joke), 1986 Phillips Richard Prince | Cartoon Jokes - - Exhibitions - Nahmad Contemporary About Richard Prince | Cartoon Jokes November 12, 2020 - January 16, 2021 Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging. © Richard Prince Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging. © Richard Prince

Richard Prince, print, Jokes

November 12 - January 16, 2021 Closed Presented by Nahmad Contemporary About The first exhibition dedicated to the artist's brazen, large-scale Cartoon Joke paintings created between 1988 and 1991, and the unveiling of five recent paintings of cartoon jokes from the artist's body of work, Blue Ripples, created between 2017 and 2019. More info RICHARD PRINCE: MONOCHROMATIC JOKES November 11, 2013 - January 25, 2014 Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Prince's 1988-1991 Cartoon Jokes series provides the core of the showcase, spotlighting a variety of comic panels copied verbatim from The New Yorker that were separated from their original. In Prince's Joke series, however, there is no profound realization to be had. This prolonged engagement with them strips the joke of its impact, transforming a humorous fiction into a pathetic-sounding truth.. Richard Prince was born in 1949 in the Panama Canal Zone, where his parents were stationed with the United States government..

Richard Prince "Jokes, Gangs, Hoods" / Richard Prince 小宮山書店 KOMIYAMA TOKYO 神保町 古書・美術作品の販売、買取

Richard Prince: Monochromatic Jokes New York: Nahmad Contemporary, 2014. Edition of 500 copies 9 x 12.75 inches (23 x 32.4 cm) Available at Fulton Ryder: http://www.fultonryder.com/publications/monochromatic_jokes Untitled, 1988 Ink and graphite on paper 7 1/2 x 11 3/4 inches 19.1 x 29.8 cm Untitled, 1987 Ink on paper 7 3/4 x 12 inches 19.7 x 30.5 cm Richard Prince, Black Jokes, 1991-1992. Etching and aquatint, sheet: 18 3/16 × 21 1/2 in. (46.2 × 54.6 cm) Plate: 10 7/8 × 15 7/8 in. (27.6 × 40.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Robert B. and Emilie W. Betts Foundation, The List Purchase Fund, Brooke Garber Neidich and the Robert Wilson Foundation 95.94.6 Richard Prince distanced himself from an exhibition of his "joke painting" series, saying "I have nothing to do with this show." Nate Freeman May 31, 2018 7:32AM, via The Art Newspaper

Richard Prince Jokes, Word art, Im jealous

The American Painter of Appropriation Art. Untitled (Cowboy) by Richard Prince, 1991-1992, via SFMOMA, San Francisco. Appropriation Art was the go-to style of the 1970s. Contemporary artists challenged how society perceived art in the same way that Marcel Duchamp had some 50 years earlier, arguing that the concept of originality was no longer. Richard Prince: Monochromatic Jokes. Nahmad Contemporary, 2014.