

PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE AMERICAN COLLECTION
21Ο◆
Ed Ruscha
Rooster
- Estimate
- $250,000 - 350,000
$389,000
Lot Details
gunpowder, pastel on paper
11 1/2 x 29 in. (29.2 x 73.7 cm)
Signed and dated "E. Ruscha 1970" lower left.
Specialist
Full-Cataloguing
Catalogue Essay
The present lot, Rooster, 1970, executed in crimson powdered pastel and gunpowder on paper, captures Ed Ruscha’s iconic and unrivaled handling of text and landscape; here ribbon-like letters swirl upon a smoky backdrop of charcoal grays and burgundy reds. Reading from left to the right the “R” rests upon a deep cardinal red border, a foreboding start to the narrative. As the word is spelled out, the red dissipates into a light grey; it travels horizontally across the composition to the paper’s far right edge, reminiscent of the early gelatin silver photographic prints which form the foundation of Ruscha’s oeuvre. Finely executed, work emphasizes the warm tone that Ruscha admired and embraced in his materials. The present lot is a pillowy trompe l’oeil that captures Ruscha’s subtle genius in both its composition and technique. Seamlessly blending text with visual illusion, it is a masterful example of the artist’s multifarious works on paper.Ruscha draws his artistic technique from the slick, flattened backdrops of Hollywood set design and the graphics of rolling movie credits. The viewer senses that the ribbon-like, silvery white letters may at any moment disappear from the screen as they stroll across the page. But each letter casts delicate and differentiated shadows onto the amorphous background of the sheet. There are also “high art” allusions at play here. The smoky gradations of light and shade that merge the planes of the composition could be found in the canonical works of Old Masters. The traditional power of these techniques comes into conjunction with the visual transience of mass media. As the artist explained in reference to these impermanent words and phrases, “When I see a word or phrase, or hear one (on the radio or in the street), I have to capture it immediately. Otherwise it will slip away from me, disappear.” (Ed Ruscha in Margit Rowell’s Cotton Puffs, Q-Tips©, Smoke and Mirrors: The Drawings of Ed Ruscha, New York, The Whitney Museum of American Art, 2004, p. 15)
Provenance
Exhibited
Literature
Ed Ruscha
American | 1937Quintessentially 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.
Browse ArtistHis 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.