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Unstructured Merriment is a classic Ed Ruscha print combining imagery and text. The Spanish colonial revival house depicted is the home of Stanley & Elyse Grinstein, the late co-founders of Gemini G.E.L.. Serving as an homage to their home, which was a hub for the LA art world during the sixties and seventies, …

Medium
Condition
Artwork is in excellent condition.
Signature
Hand-signed by artist, Signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left.
Frame
Included
Series
Gemini G.E.L.
Price ranges of medium-sized prints by Ed Ruscha
Learn more
Browse works in this category
$17,500–$20,000
This work
$0
$52,500+

Despite being credited with a Pop sensibility, Ed Ruscha defies categorization with his diverse output of photographic books and tongue-in-cheek photo-collages, paintings, and drawings. Ruscha’s work is inspired by the ironies and idiosyncrasies of life in Los Angeles, which he often conveys by placing glib words and phrases from colloquial and consumerist usage atop photographic images or fields of color. Known for painting and drawing with unusual materials such as gunpowder, blood, and Pepto Bismol, Ruscha draws attention to the deterioration of language and the pervasive cliches in pop culture, illustrated by his iconic 1979 painting I Don’t Want No Retro Spective. “You see this badly done on purpose, but the badly-done-on-purpose thing was done so well that it just becomes, let’s say, profound,” he once said. Equally renowned were his photographic books, in which he transferred the deadpan Pop style into series of images of LA—apartments, palm trees, or Twentysix Gasoline Stations (1962), his most famous work.

High auction record
$52.5m, Christie's, 2019
Blue chip
Represented by internationally recognized galleries.
Collected by major museums
Tate, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Selected exhibitions
2018
Louisiana on Paper: Ed Ruscha - VERYLouisiana Museum of Modern Art
2017
Ed Ruscha: Custom-Built Intrigue: Drawings 1974–1984Gagosian
2016
Ed Ruscha and the Great American Westde Young Museum
View all

Unstructured Merriment, 2016

19 color lithograph and screenprint
19 × 25 3/4 in
48.3 × 65.4 cm
Edition 29/60
.
$18,000
Ships from Albuquerque, NM, US
Shipping: $150 domestic only
Location
Albuquerque, Santa Fe
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Unstructured Merriment is a classic Ed Ruscha print combining imagery and text. The Spanish …

Medium
Condition
Artwork is in excellent condition.
Signature
Hand-signed by artist, Signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left.
Frame
Included
Series
Gemini G.E.L.
Price ranges of medium-sized prints by Ed Ruscha
Learn more
Browse works in this category
$17,500–$20,000
This work
$0
$52,500+

Despite being credited with a Pop sensibility, Ed Ruscha defies categorization with his diverse output of photographic books and tongue-in-cheek photo-collages, paintings, and drawings. Ruscha’s work is inspired by the ironies and idiosyncrasies of life in Los Angeles, which he often conveys by placing glib words and phrases from colloquial and consumerist usage atop photographic images or fields of color. Known for painting and drawing with unusual materials such as gunpowder, blood, and Pepto Bismol, Ruscha draws attention to the deterioration of language and the pervasive cliches in pop culture, illustrated by his iconic 1979 painting I Don’t Want No Retro Spective. “You see this badly done on purpose, but the badly-done-on-purpose thing was done so well that it just becomes, let’s say, profound,” he once said. Equally renowned were his photographic books, in which he transferred the deadpan Pop style into series of images of LA—apartments, palm trees, or Twentysix Gasoline Stations (1962), his most famous work.

High auction record
$52.5m, Christie's, 2019
Blue chip
Represented by internationally recognized galleries.
Collected by major museums
Tate, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Selected exhibitions (3)
Other works by Ed Ruscha