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An empty train track suspended against a backdrop of city buildings late at night. This scene is devoid of any human presence or vehicles... but something lurks in their absence. This cat is a common motif in Rick Prol's work, and transports the viewer to a bygone era in New York City, when elevated tracks still wound through the heart of downtown. Alternatively, it might conjure a contemporary atmosphere, akin to the sensation you experience while traversing the Williamsburg Bridge on the JMZ line, gazing into Brooklyn and back at the cityscape across the river.

[Rick Prol] Rick Prol was born and raised in New York City where he currently lives and works. He attended Cooper Union College in 1980 and began showing his work publicly in 1982, during the then burgeoning East Village art scene. As art artic Eleanor Heartney writes, “The East Village art scene of the 80`s thrived on the romance of slumming in an era of widespread economic prosperity. Rick Prol was an icon of that era, known for his cartoonish tableaux of mayhem, murder and suicide set in a rat-infested world somewhere east of First Avenue” (Art in America, 1993)

Prol`s work exemplified and helped define with “anarchical impudence” the more dangerous and harrowing aspects of urban reality with images both horrific and absurd, but always with a touch of humor. Rick Prol had two solo exhibitions at Leeahn Gallery in Seoul and Deagu, Korea in 2021. He recently held a solo show Rick Prol: Empty City in James Fuentes Gallery.

http://instagram.com/rickprol

Empty City by Rick Prol collection image

Once hailed the “Master of Gothic Angst” by American art critic Edward Leffingwell, New York native Rick Prol was an active figure in the punk rock scene of the East Village in the 1980s. Although his works embody the dangerous and dark reality of the streets, beneath their gritty charm, there also exists a deep layer of pensive composition. Now fully digitized and animated for the first time ever, we are proud to announce that Rick Prol’s “Surveillance Cat-O-Puss” and " Empty City III"has been made exclusive for OrangeHare. From Shakespeare to Goya, these piece is consistent with his style, which draws inspiration from a variety of interests that seem to take root in that era’s fertile punk soil, ultimately growing into something that is both simultaneously unsettling, humorous, and truly one of a kind. As one of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s oldest friends and last studio assistant, Prol and Basquiat exchanged ideas with each other until Basquiat’s untimely death in 1988.

Category Art
Contract Address0xa0de...612e
Token ID20
Token StandardERC-721
ChainEthereum
Last Updated4 months ago
Creator Earnings
10%

[Rick Prol] Empty City III #10

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[Rick Prol] Empty City III #10

visibility
95 views
  • Price
    USD Price
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    Expiration
    From
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
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An empty train track suspended against a backdrop of city buildings late at night. This scene is devoid of any human presence or vehicles... but something lurks in their absence. This cat is a common motif in Rick Prol's work, and transports the viewer to a bygone era in New York City, when elevated tracks still wound through the heart of downtown. Alternatively, it might conjure a contemporary atmosphere, akin to the sensation you experience while traversing the Williamsburg Bridge on the JMZ line, gazing into Brooklyn and back at the cityscape across the river.

[Rick Prol] Rick Prol was born and raised in New York City where he currently lives and works. He attended Cooper Union College in 1980 and began showing his work publicly in 1982, during the then burgeoning East Village art scene. As art artic Eleanor Heartney writes, “The East Village art scene of the 80`s thrived on the romance of slumming in an era of widespread economic prosperity. Rick Prol was an icon of that era, known for his cartoonish tableaux of mayhem, murder and suicide set in a rat-infested world somewhere east of First Avenue” (Art in America, 1993)

Prol`s work exemplified and helped define with “anarchical impudence” the more dangerous and harrowing aspects of urban reality with images both horrific and absurd, but always with a touch of humor. Rick Prol had two solo exhibitions at Leeahn Gallery in Seoul and Deagu, Korea in 2021. He recently held a solo show Rick Prol: Empty City in James Fuentes Gallery.

http://instagram.com/rickprol

Empty City by Rick Prol collection image

Once hailed the “Master of Gothic Angst” by American art critic Edward Leffingwell, New York native Rick Prol was an active figure in the punk rock scene of the East Village in the 1980s. Although his works embody the dangerous and dark reality of the streets, beneath their gritty charm, there also exists a deep layer of pensive composition. Now fully digitized and animated for the first time ever, we are proud to announce that Rick Prol’s “Surveillance Cat-O-Puss” and " Empty City III"has been made exclusive for OrangeHare. From Shakespeare to Goya, these piece is consistent with his style, which draws inspiration from a variety of interests that seem to take root in that era’s fertile punk soil, ultimately growing into something that is both simultaneously unsettling, humorous, and truly one of a kind. As one of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s oldest friends and last studio assistant, Prol and Basquiat exchanged ideas with each other until Basquiat’s untimely death in 1988.

Category Art
Contract Address0xa0de...612e
Token ID20
Token StandardERC-721
ChainEthereum
Last Updated4 months ago
Creator Earnings
10%
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