Richard Prince – Canaries in the Coal Mine

Richard Prince – Canaries in the Coal Mine

Astrup Fearnley Museet

Richard Prince, Can’t Read, Can’t Write, Can’t Swim, 1989
Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas, 75 x 58 inches, Astrup Fearnley Collection, Oslo

January 18, 2007

Richard Prince
Canaries in the Coal Mine

20 January-29 April 2007

Opening 20 January at 2 pm.

Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art
Dronningens gate 4, Oslo, Norway
tel: 47 22 93 60 60

www.afmuseet.no

Richard Prince (b. 1949) is among the most well known and respected artists in the contemporary art world, and one of its most mysterious and enigmatic as well. He is a conceptual artist, a photographer, a writer, a painter, a sculptor, a collector, an actor, a graphic designer, a curator simultaneously the other and himself. In this exhibition organized by the Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo, we have decided with the artist to concentrate on his paintings and to explore and present the multiplicity of his pictorial language and narrative structures as they have evolved over the last two decades.

The painted, as against the photographic, world of Richard Prince is neither preconceived nor harmonious, linear, stable or continuous. Instead, it is a place of discrepancy and displacement, of contradictions and misunderstandings (much like reality in general). We could even speak of the absurdity of these works, the zone where irreconcilable elements on the pictorial surface initiate the signification. Herein, the spectator is confronted by a confusing and enigmatic frame of reference. Indeed, Princes figurative paintings are about reconstructing reality, or fabricating parallel realities.

Artists have, of course, long been driven to subvert norms and preconceived schemas in their efforts to construct new visions. Until Duchamp, and later Warhol, painting was principally concerned with creating forms and figures, but these two artists, in conjunction with many others yet, helped shift the register onto questions of the ready-made and appropriation. The art of Richard Prince falls within this pale, recontextualising or manipulating ready-made, even stolen, images into more complex narrative structures structures at the core of his cultural critique. Images thus become fragmented, superimposed, repeated or transparent. And then there is the image/text correlation, Princes simultaneous development of two linguistic codes, one based in rhetoric and the other in aesthetics. Vulgar jokes are thus spelled out in the center of a monochromatic canvas, anchoring linguistic humor to a play on color and form.

Repetition in different forms plays an important role in Prince narrative structures. Most obvious are his rephotographed appropriations, including characteristic motifs such as the livings rooms, models, landscapes and gangs. In the paintings, it is often the repetition of the same jokes, the same cartoons, the same themes within a series, but each time they are different, slightly transformed. Reprise, however, is perhaps a more appropriate qualifier for the paintings than repetition as the images are first integrated into Princes system, into his ecriture, before their function as appropriation takes hold. Reprise can thus be said to be a modernist concept, pertaining to the liberty of the artist. Thus it is in this sense that Prince the painter emerges as an artist not merely engaged with the calculated appropriation of images, signs or objects (and the critical baggage that comes with these devices), but one equally involved with the development of a genuine sensibility related to the touch.

The exhibition includes paintings from the 1980s until the recent de Kooning inspired paintings. Exhibition curators are Gunnar B. Kvaran and Hanne Beate Ueland.
Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art
Dronningens gate 4, Oslo, Norway
tel: 47 22 93 60 60

www.afmuseet.no

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January 18, 2007

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