Richard Prince created in 1983
61 cm
50.8 cm
Richard Prince is a contemporary American artist, widely recognized as a pioneer of Appropriation Art. His work is characterized by taking existing images, transforming or recontextualizing them, and thereby assigning new meaning to them. This method particularly involves the use of media, advertisements, and images from popular culture, often sparking debates over authorship, copyright, and originality. Despite the controversy, Richard Prince has achieved great success in the contemporary art market. His works have sold for high prices at auctions and have been exhibited in major museums and galleries around the world. Notably, his pieces are part of the collections at institutions such as MoMA and the Guggenheim Museum. Through appropriation, Prince continues to challenge the boundaries of copyright and creativity in contemporary art. His works go beyond merely borrowing images, offering deep insights into how images are consumed and interpreted.
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Space776 exhibits early to mid-career artists who work in a variety of mediums ranging from live multimedia performance art to traditional oil painting. The gallery accommodates artists from around the globe, taking their works to local and international art fairs such as Volta New York, Volta Basel, Art Miami, Palm Beach Modern + Contemporary, and Art Busan. Space776 was founded in Bushwick, Brooklyn in 2013. In 2020, the gallery relocated to its current residence at 37-39 Clinton Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Space776 also opened a location in Seoul, South Korea in 2020 in accordance with the gallery’s mission to promote the international exchange between local New York artists and the Korean artistic sphere.
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