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Richard Prince
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The merging of these three images thus perfectly capture Prince’s term ‘Spiritual America’, a sense of unattainable glamour: “‘Spiritual America addresses that broad cultural yearning for something more—and how it is often expressed in the most tawdry, illicit manner…the image has come to embody that strangely motivating desire on the part of the viewer to know, to have, and even to be the person in the frame.” (Nancy Spector, Richard Prince, 2008, p. 79)
Richard Prince
American | 1947For more than three decades, Prince's universally celebrated practice has pursued the subversive strategy of appropriating commonplace imagery and themes – such as photographs of quintessential Western cowboys and "biker chicks," the front covers of nurse romance novellas, and jokes and cartoons – to deconstruct singular notions of authorship, authenticity and identity.
Starting his career as a member of the Pictures Generation in the 1970s alongside such contemporaries as Cindy Sherman, Robert Longo and Sherrie Levine, Prince is widely acknowledged as having expanded the accepted parameters of art-making with his so-called "re-photography" technique – a revolutionary appropriation strategy of photographing pre-existing images from magazine ads and presenting them as his own. Prince's practice of appropriating familiar subject matter exposes the inner mechanics of desire and power pervading the media and our cultural consciousness at large, particularly as they relate to identity and gender constructs.