miércoles, 9 de junio de 2010

UNTITLED (COWBOY)


Untitled (Cowboy) (1989). Richard Prince. Otra de las refotografías de la serie de vaqueros de Richard Prince. Esta serie levantó una polémica considerable debido a los derechos de autor, si bien no cabe duda de que la copia vendida es obra de este artista visual, que utilizó una campaña publicitaria (fotos y en ocasiones vídeos) como base para sus refotografías. Pese a las críticas del director de fotografía del MoMA, Prince se defiende alegando que "cuando no tienes un entrenamiento exhaustivo en un tema en particular puedes aportar algo que no se ha aportado con anterioridad".
Casa de subastas: Christie's Lugar: Nueva York Fecha: noviembre de 2005 Precio: 1.248.000 dólares.
***
In the mid-1970s, Prince was an aspiring painter who earned a living by clipping articles from magazines for staff writers at Time-Life Inc. What remained at the end of the day were the advertisements, featuring gleaming luxury goods and impossibly perfect models; both fascinated and repulsed by these ubiquitous images, the artist began rephotographing them, using a repertoire of strategies (such as blurring, cropping, and enlarging) to intensify their original artifice. In so doing, Prince undermined the seeming naturalness and inevitability of the images, revealing them as hallucinatory fictions of society's desires. Untitled (Cowboy) is a high point of the artist's ongoing deconstruction of an American archetype as old as the first trailblazers and as timely as then-outgoing president Ronald Reagan. Prince's picture is a copy (the photograph) of a copy (the advertisement) of a myth (the cowboy). Perpetually disappearing into the sunset, this lone ranger is also a convincing stand-in for the artist himself, endlessly chasing the meaning behind surfaces. Created in the fade-out of a decade devoted to materialism and illusion, Untitled (Cowboy) is, in the largest sense, a meditation on an entire culture's continuing attraction to spectacle over lived experience.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

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