b. 1949, United States

Richard Prince Biography

Since the late 1970s, American contemporary artist Richard Prince has interrogated symbols of American mainstream culture and desires that include masculinity, sexuality, and celebrity and consumer culture. Unbound by a particular style or medium, the artist challenges and redefines ideas of appropriation, authorship, and originality in art, as well as art itself.

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Born in the Panama Canal Zone and raised in Boston, Prince moved to New York in 1973, where he has been living and working since. One of his first jobs in the city was with Time Life Publications. One day, while tearing sheets from some magazines, he realised that leftover images could be used to make works of art. He began re-photographing advertisements and grouping them, as in Untitled (Cigarettes) (1978–9), which shows a colour and a black-and-white photograph of a cigarette packet side by side. The artist also became associated with the Pictures Generation, a group of American artists—among them Sherrie Levine, Robert Longo, David Salle, Laurie Simmons, and Cindy Sherman—who came of age in the early 1980s, gaining recognition for their use of (often found) photographic images to examine American media culture.

Symbols of mainstream American culture continued to enter Prince's works over the next decade, often in the form of black-and-white photographs of advertisements or existing artworks to which he added colour and background dotted screens. 'Cowboys'—one of his most well-known appropriation series—for example, consists of Marlboro advertisements from the 1950s, photographed and presented without the logo. Taken out of their original contexts, works such as Untitled (cowboy) (1989)—depicting a figure riding his horse against a blue sky dotted with clouds—reveal the artificiality of the cowboy icon that was then an embodiment of American masculinity.

According to the critic Hal Foster in his 1985 book Recodings, Prince re-photographs advertising material 'not to expose the manipulation therein ... but to catch seduction in the act, to savor his own fascination with such images—even as they manipulate him via insinuated desire.' Spiritual America (1983), another of Prince's best known and most controversial works, is a re-photographed image of commercial photographer Gary Gross' 1976 portrait of a then-10-year-old Brooke Shields, who appears naked.

Prince's appropriation of pop culture has led him to explore unconventional subject matter and methods, challenging the definition of an art object. In 1985, for example, he started appropriating one-line jokes from magazines. These now-iconic joke paintings include I Changed My Name (1988) ('I never had a penny to my name so I changed my name'), the text silkscreened on canvas against a monochromatic background. He also started replacing captions on cartoon images.

In the early 1980s Prince developed a process of juxtaposing photographic images in a grid format, a grouping of found images known in photographic labs as the technique of 'ganging'. Like his other works, the artist's gangs reference pop culture magazine motifs, such as women on motorbikes in Live Free or Die (Gang) (1986) or cars and mountains in Creative Evolution 3 (1987)—image types associated with male desire. Prince's works from the 1990s on fluidly traverse multiple media while interrogating the different layers of mass media culture. His 'White Paintings' series from the late 1980s and early 1990s combine silkscreens made from publications with his drawings of domestic interiors, merging personal life and the larger culture.

Prince's 'Girlfriends' series, also from the early 1990s, consists of re-photographing images of female models in biker magazines. The 'Nurses' paintings (2002–6), on the other hand, are based on the covers of pulp fiction paperbacks featuring eroticised nurses. The artist scanned the covers and modified them with acrylic paint, covering up the nurses' faces with surgical masks and transforming the backgrounds into amorphous environments.

In recent artwork, Prince has continued to challenge the definitions of originality and authorship and extend the legacy he inherited from Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol, often incorporating reproductions of other artists he admires, such as Willem de Kooning. For his 2018 solo exhibition High Times at Gagosian New York, he recycled his own drawings, first scanning and enlarging cartoon figures from his sketchbooks, then printing them on canvas and painting portions of them with oil sticks and acrylic paint. This made it difficult to distinguish between what had been painted and what had been printed. Even the exhibition text contributed to the debate over originality and authenticity—in print it was attributed to a journalist named Joan Katz, but its style closely matched the artist's on his own website.

Sherry Paik | Ocula | 2019

Richard Prince
featured artworks

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Untitled (Pens) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork photography
Richard Prince Untitled (Pens), 1979 Four Ektacolor photographs
50.8 x 61 cm
Gagosian Request Price & Availability
Untitled (Picasso) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork painting, print, drawing
Richard Prince Untitled (Picasso), 2010 Acrylic, charcoal, crayon, and oil on inkjet laid down on canvas
91.4 x 182.9 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Untitled (Just My Luck) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork painting, works on paper, photography, print, drawing
Richard Prince Untitled (Just My Luck), 2019 - 2020 Collage, acrylic, oil stick, ink jet, charcoal, paper, canvas
79 x 68.6 x 4 cm
Sadie Coles HQ Request Price & Availability
Untitled (Respect) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork painting, works on paper, photography, print, drawing
Richard Prince Untitled (Respect), 2020 Collage, acrylic, ink jet, paper, canvas
152.4 x 199.4 x 4.4 cm
Sadie Coles HQ Request Price & Availability
Untitled (three women’s hands with gloves) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork photography
Richard Prince Untitled (three women’s hands with gloves), 1980 Suite of 3 chromogenic development prints, printed c. 1980
34.75 x 47.75 inches
Bruce Silverstein Request Price & Availability
untitled (Joke - I never had a penny to my name, so I changed my name…) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork works on paper, print
Richard Prince untitled (Joke - I never had a penny to my name, so I changed my name…), 1987 Silkscreen on canvas, drawing and writing by Richard Prince
61 x 45.7 cm
MEYER*KAINER Request Price & Availability
Good Revolution (Gang) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork photography
Richard Prince Good Revolution (Gang), 1990 Ektacolor photograph
213.4 x 121.9 cm
Not for sale
Gladstone Gallery
Mother, Brother, Sister (Gang) by Richard Prince contemporary artwork photography
Richard Prince Mother, Brother, Sister (Gang), 1990 Ektacolor photograph (annotated)
196.9 x 118.1 cm
Not for sale
Gladstone Gallery
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Richard Prince
current & recent
exhibitions

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Represented by these
Ocula Member Galleries

Almine Rech contemporary art gallery in Brussels, Belgium
Almine Rech London, New York, Shanghai, Paris, Brussels +2
Gagosian contemporary art gallery in 980 Madison Avenue, New York, United States
Gagosian Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles, New York, Paris +6
Gladstone Gallery contemporary art gallery in 515 West 24th Street, New York, United States
Gladstone Gallery New York, Seoul, Brussels
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