

ULTIMATE
17
Amanda Means
Light Bulb 00062C
- Estimate
- £10,000 - 15,000‡
£21,250
Lot Details
Unique colour Polaroid print.
2007
Sheet: 79.4 x 56.3 cm (31 1/4 x 22 1/8 in.)
Frame: 86.8 x 64 cm (34 1/8 x 25 1/4 in.)
Frame: 86.8 x 64 cm (34 1/8 x 25 1/4 in.)
Signed, titled and dated in ink on an artist label affixed to the reverse of the mount.
This work is unique.
This work is unique.
Specialist
Full-Cataloguing
Catalogue Essay
Amanda Means has focused on light throughout her oeuvre, beginning in the 1960s, experimenting with camera-less techniques and negative exposures. In her ongoing Colour Light Bulbs series, these modest household items are ‘transformed from their mass-produced origins to photographic objects of limitless potential and lavish beauty.’ Created using a rare 20x24 Polaroid camera – one of only five built by Polaroid in the late 1970s – the work offered here is a mesmerising full-frame portrait of a light bulb with its filament glowing bright pink against a rich turquoise background. ‘I loved making exposures with the mammoth camera,’ explains Means, ‘peeling back the negative of each large print to instantly reveal these sensual, energy-filled, glimmering globes.’ The New York-based artist has exhibited internationally and her work resides in numerous public institutions, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, SFMOMA and the National Gallery of Canada. Means was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2017 for her ongoing contributions to the medium of photography.