Ed Ruscha - Editions & Works on Paper New York Tuesday, October 24, 2023 | Phillips

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  • Ed Ruscha’s Sin presents the single word ‘SIN’ with a trompe l’oeil affect to produce the illusion that the letters have been made from folded paper, emerging from “the traditionally flat, two-dimensional realm of writing into three-dimensional space.”1 Many of Ruscha’s early prints explored the power of single words and the accompanying freedom with which to represent them, as words have no prescribed size. The evocative word ‘SIN’ is accompanied by an olive, situated perilously close to the edge of the composition, as if to tease that it might roll away out of sight at any given moment. In many of Ruscha’s early prints, he included unexpected and true-to-size objects, such as an olive, a fly, or a marble. The artist once remarked, “Often when an idea is so overwhelming, I use a small unlike item to ‘nag’ the theme.”2 Does the presence of the olive allude to “the power of temptation that attends the theological concept” or does the Surrealist pairing transform a somber notion into “an old idea worthy of a laugh and a martini?”3

     

     

    1 John Selvidge, “Don’t Nod at an Evil Olive: Ed Ruscha at Oklahoma Contemporary,” Art Focus Oklahoma, Summer 2021

    2 Siri Engberg, “Out of Print: The Editions of Edward Ruscha, ” in Edward Ruscha Editions 1959-1999: Catalogue Raisonné, p. 26

    3 John Selvidge, “Don’t Nod at an Evil Olive: Ed Ruscha at Oklahoma Contemporary,” Art Focus Oklahoma, Summer 2021 

    • Literature

      Siri Engberg 41
      Cirrus Editions p. 338

    • Artist Biography

      Ed Ruscha

      American • 1937

      Quintessentially American, Ed Ruscha is an L.A.-based artist whose art, like California itself, is both geographically rooted and a metaphor for an American state of mind. Ruscha is a deft creator of photography, film, painting, drawing, prints and artist books, whose works are simultaneously unexpected and familiar, both ironic and sincere.

      His most iconic works are at turns poetic and deadpan, epigrammatic text with nods to advertising copy, juxtaposed with imagery that is either cinematic and sublime or seemingly wry documentary. Whether the subject is his iconic Standard Gas Station or the Hollywood Sign, a parking lot or highway, his works are a distillation of American idealism, echoing the expansive Western landscape and optimism unique to postwar America.

      View More Works

125

Sin (E. 41, C. p. 338)

1970
Screenprint in colors, on Louvain Opaque Cover paper, with full margins.
I. 12 7/8 x 21 5/8 in. (32.7 x 54.9 cm)
S. 18 7/8 x 26 1/4 in. (47.9 x 66.7 cm)

Signed, dated and numbered 1/150 in pencil (there were also 5 artist's proofs), published by Cirrus Editions, Los Angeles (with their blindstamp), framed.

Full Cataloguing

Estimate
$10,000 - 15,000 

Sold for $10,160

Contact Specialist

Editions@phillips.com
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Editions & Works on Paper

New York Auction 24-26 October 2023