About The Work
A Particular Kind of Heaven is one in a series of related works Ruscha created in the mid-1980s in which he silhouetted words and phrases against a sky backdrop. The painting’s large-scale, panoramic format and lucent, chromatic light effects relate to a long tradition of American landscape painting, represented by such Hudson River School artists as Albert Bierstadt, as well as other artists of the American West.
Ruscha’s westward-facing California sunset evokes symbolic associations of the American West, including the perception of California as an earthly Eden or El Dorado, and the locus for the ultimate fulfillment of America’s “manifest destiny” to settle the continent. Ruscha’s words, “A Particular Kind of Heaven,” hover over the horizon like geometric skywriting and they dominate the sunset. Related to, but isolated from, the context of language and clear communication, Ruscha’s enigmatic words invite scrutiny and questions by drawing the viewer’s attention to the disjunctions between words, language, and meanings, and ultimately this work defies precise definitions.
The white capital letters featured in the painting, which resemble those in the famous Hollywood sign in Los Angeles, recall a film title projected on a movie screen. Similarly, the panoramic, Technicolor landscape brings to mind classic western films and evokes the popular idea of California as an earthly paradise.
About Ed Ruscha
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Art for Democracy: Bid or Buy Now
- Interviews & Features: IFPDA Print Fair Preview - An Interview with Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl
- Interviews & Features: David Byrne is releasing an edition with Artspace and Phaidon
- Interviews & Features: The Artspace Group Show: Water
- Interviews & Features: Monica Nelson - The Art for Home Interview
Lithograph on thick art stock
24.00 x 36.00 in
61.0 x 91.4 cm
This is an open edition. It is not signed or numbered.
About The Work
A Particular Kind of Heaven is one in a series of related works Ruscha created in the mid-1980s in which he silhouetted words and phrases against a sky backdrop. The painting’s large-scale, panoramic format and lucent, chromatic light effects relate to a long tradition of American landscape painting, represented by such Hudson River School artists as Albert Bierstadt, as well as other artists of the American West.
Ruscha’s westward-facing California sunset evokes symbolic associations of the American West, including the perception of California as an earthly Eden or El Dorado, and the locus for the ultimate fulfillment of America’s “manifest destiny” to settle the continent. Ruscha’s words, “A Particular Kind of Heaven,” hover over the horizon like geometric skywriting and they dominate the sunset. Related to, but isolated from, the context of language and clear communication, Ruscha’s enigmatic words invite scrutiny and questions by drawing the viewer’s attention to the disjunctions between words, language, and meanings, and ultimately this work defies precise definitions.
The white capital letters featured in the painting, which resemble those in the famous Hollywood sign in Los Angeles, recall a film title projected on a movie screen. Similarly, the panoramic, Technicolor landscape brings to mind classic western films and evokes the popular idea of California as an earthly paradise.
About Ed Ruscha
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Art for Democracy: Bid or Buy Now
- Interviews & Features: IFPDA Print Fair Preview - An Interview with Gemini G.E.L. at Joni Moisant Weyl
- Interviews & Features: David Byrne is releasing an edition with Artspace and Phaidon
- Interviews & Features: The Artspace Group Show: Water
- Interviews & Features: Monica Nelson - The Art for Home Interview
As new / near mint condition. No apparent condition issues.
- Ships in 1 to 5 business days from United Kingdom.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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