VICTOR VASERELY, Rosenthalkarte, n.d. [ca 1995]

VVaserely-postcardCeramic-recto600

VICTOR VASERELY, Rosenthalkarte, n.d. [ca 1995]
16 x 11,5 cm
printed ceramic postcard, pencil, plastic support, paper cushion, beauty box + original Rosenthal mail wrapping; complete as issued
edition unknown
published by Rosenthal GmbH, Selb, Germany
pristine condition
€ 260,- plus € 18,- Track & Trace registered EU mail


VVaserely-postcardCeramic-verso600

VVaserely-postcardCeramic-postpackage600

History of prices:
Galeria Tarquinia. Los Lagos, Chile 11 October 2022 € 750,-
eBay-armonia24, Planegg, Germany 11 October 2022 € 99,-
Catawiki, Assen, Netherlands 20 December 2018 € 310,- (hammer price)

RICHARD PRINCE, I never had a penny to my name…., 1994

RICHARD PRINCE, ‘I never had a penny to my name, so I changed my name.[1985]’, 1994
10,5 x 15 cm
signed, dated
p.o.r.

 

This signed postcard is a reproduction of a Richard Prince Joke painting that comes in more than one version. A shadow line in between the two parts of the painting has been replaced by a designer’s cut on the post card. By this a vertical white line is created that is not part of the painting as is shown below.

RPrince.i-never-had-a-penny500

RPrinceRubellFamilyColl.500
Coll. Rubell Family Collection, Miami, USA
inv.BF-storage.card

LOUISE BOURGEOIS, Untitled, 1994

     

LOUISE BOURGEOIS, Untitled, 1994
each 92,7 x 71 cm / 36 x 28 inches
hand coloured intaglio print
edition 65 (black and white) and edition 35 (red)
signed, numbered
published by The Paris Review, New York, USA
not available

Louise Bourgeois made sculptures in wood, steel, stone and cast rubber and used drawing and printing as a tool of artistic expression, often organic in form and sexually explicit, emotionally aggressive yet witty, covered many stylistic bases. But from first to last they shared a set of repeated themes centered on the human body and its need for nurture and protection in a frightening world;  protection often translated into images of shelter or home.

 

History of prices:
each US$ 3,500.-  September 2012

TONY CRAGG, Untitled, 1994 [6 etchings Griffelkunst]

TONY CRAGG, Untitled, 1994
each 34,5 x 39 cm
6 etchings
signed in pencil
limited edition
mint
published by Griffelkunst, Hamburg, Germany
€ 975,- plus € 32,- Track & Trace registered mail
inv.TCra 1025-pr

This series of etchings has the following titles: Things, Autumn, Current, The Foggy, Desert and Vessel.

History of prices:
K & K Auktionen, Heidelberg, Germany € 1.100,- 14 July 2023 (hammer price)
Berrenge, Berlin, Germany € 850,- 2 December 2022 (Qty 4, hammer price)
Dorotheum, Vienna, Austria € 832,- 10 October 2022 (Qty 6, hammer price)
Sturies Andreas, Düsseldorf, Germany € 950,- 14 November 2020 (hammer price)
Doebele-Kunstauktionen, Dettelbach-Effeldorf, Germany € 600,- 16 May 2020 (hammer price)
Catawiki June 2014 € 410,-

SYLVIE FLEURY, no title, 1993 [signed and numbered wrapping paper]

SYLVIE FLEURY
no title, 1993
100,5 x 70,5 cm
edition 200 of which 100 are signed, numbered and dated  
published by Galerie van Gelder Editions, Amsterdam, Netherlands
mint
€ 300,- plus € 18,- registered mail

Galerie van Gelder Editions invites artists to come up with an idea for wrapping paper to be used in the gallery for wrapping sold art works.

History of prices:
Kunstauktionshaus Schloss Ahlden, Ahlden, Germany € 500,- 28 November 2020 (hammer price)
Galerie van Gelder Editions, Amsterdam, Netherlands € 95,- / Dfl. 200,-  September 1993 (year of issue)

STEVEN PARRINO, Black Flag, 1993

STEVEN PARRINO, Black Flag, 2003
42 x 30 cm
portfolio of 4 sheets
edition 15
signed, numbered, name stamped
published by Galerie de Multiple, Paris, France
not available

STEVEN PARRINO was among other things known for wiping out texts with his black marker in order to draw attention to the language of the images in photographed printed matter. Here a few pages of a book about the history of the band Black Flag has been reproduced. Less important parts in the text have been eliminated by the artist in order to come to essentials like: “The tortuous music was meant to signify the band member’s intense engagement – most tattooed the Black Flag bars on their bodies – and the frustration of tooling around in the face of poverty and indifference. Black Flag’ work ethic – the constant touring, the fully committed performances, the relentless rehearsals – was a way of working through the pain, drowning it out in wave after wave of noise and adrenaline. As the old joke goes, Black Flag was suffering for their art, and now the audience had to suffer for it, too. Gina even had a name for the approach ‘the blasting concept’, or a sonic assault on the audience. Joe Carducci recalls one show when the band played for over two hours. “By the end,” he says, “people were just straggling away, like from a battlefield.”
The band had become as alienated from its own audience as it was from society in general. “We were trying to play through the audience rather than to the audience.” Stevenson said “We would put our heads down, play as hard as we could, and didn’t acknowledge their existence.”….

 

History of prices:
Galerie de Multiple, Paris, France   € 900,- February 2013