WORKS FROM THE COLLECTION OF MICHAEL CRICHTON
RICHARD PRINCE (B. 1949)

Untitled (fashion)

Details
RICHARD PRINCE (B. 1949)
Untitled (fashion)
signed, numbered and incorrectly dated by the artist 'R. Prince 1980 1/1' (lower right margin)
gelatin silver print mounted on board
image: 40 x 26 5/8 in. (101.6 x 67.6 cm.)
sheet: 40 x 29 7/8 in. (101.6 x 75.9 cm.)
Executed in 1982-1984. This work is unique in this format.
Provenance
Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York
Private collection, Boston
Anon. sale; Christie's, New York, 11 November 2004, lot 309
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner
Exhibited
New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Minneapolis, Walker Art Center, Richard Prince: Spiritual America, September 2007-June 2008, p. 79 (illustrated in color).
Sale Room Notice
Please note this work was executed in 1982-1984.

Lot Essay

Executed in 1980, Richard Prince's Untitled (fashion) is an image based on the seductive power of advertising. Prince typically works in small series and this is a unique photograph that belongs to a further edition of two much smaller prints. The pouted lips and elaborate quiff of this tightly framed glamazon represents a group of early works in which Prince corralled pictures of fashion models for his own artistic ends. Having carefully selected his images based on the recurring nature of the pose, lighting or product featured therein, Prince would then re-photograph his subject, making it his own. This iconoclastic gesture was not only a decisive breakthrough in the artist's own practice, it also ushered in an entirely new, critical approach to art making; one that questioned notions of originality and the privileged status of the unique aesthetic object.

From his day-job in the tear-sheet department of Time-Life publications, Prince had learnt that the isolation of mass-culture imagery offered an opportunity to examine various codes of representation and visual cliché's. For this work, which dominating in its larger-than-life scale, Prince was focused on gathering a series of pictures that feature gorgeous models with their hair draped over one eye. This seemingly mundane observation of a vaguely absurd hairstyle wouldn't elicit a second glance in the pages of a magazine, but Prince's intervention has revealed a form of highly orchestrated fiction. The re-photographed image remains unchanged save for the removal of all identifying text and some careful cropping. Yet this beauty has been transformed by her new context to reveal the mechanisms of seduction and desire that play upon us daily.

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