

164
Keith Haring
Untitled (Recent Work Invitation)
- Estimate
- £2,000 - 3,000
£6,350
Lot Details
Unique drawing in black felt-tip pen, on pigment printed wove card, with full margins.
1988
I. 13.7 x 9.3 cm (5 3/8 x 3 5/8 in.)
S. 14.3 x 10.2 cm (5 5/8 x 4 in.)
S. 14.3 x 10.2 cm (5 5/8 x 4 in.)
Signed, dated and dedicated 'For George' in black felt-tip pen (dedicated to George Mulder of George Mulder Fine Arts), the card produced as the invitation for the Recent Works exhibition held at Tony Shafrazi Gallery, New York, 3 December 1988 to 7 January 1989, framed.
Specialist
Further Details
Full-Cataloguing
Provenance
Keith Haring
American | B. 1958 D. 1990Haring's art and life typified youthful exuberance and fearlessness. While seemingly playful and transparent, Haring dealt with weighty subjects such as death, sex and war, enabling subtle and multiple interpretations.
Throughout his tragically brief career, Haring refined a visual language of symbols, which he called icons, the origins of which began with his trademark linear style scrawled in white chalk on the black unused advertising spaces in subway stations. Haring developed and disseminated these icons far and wide, in his vibrant and dynamic style, from public murals and paintings to t-shirts and Swatch watches. His art bridged high and low, erasing the distinctions between rarefied art, political activism and popular culture.
Browse ArtistThroughout his tragically brief career, Haring refined a visual language of symbols, which he called icons, the origins of which began with his trademark linear style scrawled in white chalk on the black unused advertising spaces in subway stations. Haring developed and disseminated these icons far and wide, in his vibrant and dynamic style, from public murals and paintings to t-shirts and Swatch watches. His art bridged high and low, erasing the distinctions between rarefied art, political activism and popular culture.