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Ed RUSCHA
(b. 1937)
Ed
Ruscha was born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1937. He is well known
not only for his paintings but also for his photography and
films. Ruscha's flat, textual paintings have been associated
with both the Pop Art movement and the beat generation.
After living for fifteen years in Oklahoma City, Ruscha
moved permanently to Los Angeles where he attended the Chouinard
Art Institute from 1956 to 1960. By the mid sixties, the artist
had published his first photography book, Twenty-Six Gasoline
Stations, and had completed a series of paintings that displayed
with great precision a single word against a flatly lit background.
Ruscha was associated at this time with the Ferus Gallery
Group, which also included such artists as Edward Moses, Ken
Price, Robert Irwin, and Edward Kienholz.
From 1969 to 1970, he was a guest professor at the University
of California. Ruscha produced his first film entitled Premium
soon following his time at the university, and continued work
on his textual paintings. Some works include such figurative
and verbal symbols as egg yolk, blood, and gunpowder. Ruscha
worked to connect linguistic symbols with visual idioms and
to elevate them to the point of the cosmic.
During the eighties, Ruscha executed a series of drawings
incorporating vegetable pigment and depicting mysteriously
cast light and phrases such as 99% DEVIL, 1% ANGEL. The artist's
use of light beams may be attributed to his Catholic upbringing;
illumination as a symbol of the divine comes into play in
many of his paintings. Still, Ruscha claims no particular
moral or spiritual position. In 1985, Ruscha executed his
first public commission, a mural for the Miami Dade Public
Library that displays the phrase Words Without Thoughts Never
to Heaven Go.
Since 1990, Ruscha has produced several larger works depicting
empty rooms into which light projects. He has also experimented
more recently with curved canvases. Ed Ruscha's work has
been shown internationally for thirty years, and is permanently
represented in many major museum collections.
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