MTU Cork Library Catalogue

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Richard Prince : adult, comedy, action, drama / Richard Prince.

By: Prince, Richard, 1949-.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : Scalo, 1995Description: 239 p. : col. ill. ; 28 cm. + hbk.ISBN: 1881616363.Other title: Adult, comedy, action, drama [Other title].Subject(s): Prince, Richard, 1949- | Photography, ArtisticDDC classification: 709.2 PRI
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
General Lending MTU Crawford College of Art and Design Library Lending 709.2 PRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 00005564
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

This text is Richard Prince's personal artist's diary of ten years. Prince is a collector of varied specimens of visual culture - advertisements, trivial facts, odd photographs, sketches for paintings, meaningful pictures, and banal media images. He has often called his work social science fiction. This is Prince's docu-drama serial adventure into media imagery. The book includes his satire of the Playboy bunny as a death's head, the biker mamas, the Marlboro cowboys, Mike Kelley in performance, comic books, worn-out jokes, newspaper fillers, and banal photographs.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Best known for his "joke paintings"‘Henny Youngmanesque jokes painted on monochrome canvases‘and iconographic images of biker chicks and Marlboro men "rephotographed" from magazine ads, Prince has produced a body of art that works best in accumulation. It would be hard to appreciate one joke painting more than another or to delineate the artist's development through his "girlfriends" series. Yet, taken as a whole, these disparate works form a complex reflection of contemporary society, its media cultures, and the prejudices of the art world itself. Because of the serious questions he raises, the work also lends itself to a tedious reductionist analysis that too often dulls the emotion and ignores the inherent humor of the pieces. This book offers the best of all views into Prince's world: 235 reproductions selected by Prince‘both his own pieces and images from magazines‘are served up free of any interpretation. Even the dustjacket merely lists titles. While those unfamiliar with Prince may need some encouragement to spend a day contemplating these often apparently conventional images, they will be rewarded. This excellent summary of the artist's work and ideas belongs in all libraries collecting works on contemporary American artists.‘Eric Bryant, "Library Journal" (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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