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Property from a Distinguished California Collection
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396

Tom Friedman

Untitled (Dollar Bill)

2000
Archival inkjet print in colors, on Somerset paper, with full margins.
I. 13 1/4 x 33 1/2 in. (33.7 x 85.1 cm)
S. 21 1/4 x 41 1/4 in. (54 x 104.8 cm)
Signed and numbered 62/100 in pencil, published by the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadephia, framed.

Tom Friedman

American | 1965

Tom Friedman is a multimedia artist working mainly in sculpture and works-on-paper. Interested in looking at the thin line between fantasy and autobiography, Friedman often creates works that push viewers into a complicit state of witnessing. His sculptures are composed of a multitude of objects, and he assembles them in such a way as to transform the mundane into an intricate work of art. He combines materials such as Styrofoam, foil, paper, clay, wire, hair and fuzz through a labor-intensive practice that seeks to tell a story, whether about himself or the world at large.

Friedman's approach to autobiography is not memoiristic. Rather, he takes the smallest moments of his life, like a piece of paper found on the street, and blows it out of proportion.

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