All posts tagged: Richard Prince

A Fondazione Prada Exhibition Pairs Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince

A Fondazione Prada Exhibition Pairs Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince

What is appropriate to appropriate? That question is the one that animates practices of Richard Prince and Arthur Jafa, who are currently showing their work together at the Fondazione Prada in Venice.   At first glance, the pairing might seem like an unconventional one, even though both artists are well known for appropriating others’ images. “I’m surprised that people are surprised,” Jafa told me in a video interview ahead of the exhibition. “I think it’s pretty apparent that a large part of what I do, at least inside the art world, just wouldn’t be possible without Richard’s precedent.” Related Articles “They are both absolutely scavengers for and collectors of images from every possible source,” Nancy Spector, the exhibition’s curator, said in a recent interview.   Jafa and Prince met during the debut exhibition of Jafa’s AGHDRA (2021), a video of an ocean made of digital rocks that premiered that year at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise in Harlem. Jafa thought Prince might just come to watch about 10–15 minutes, but Prince stayed in the gallery for the …

Fondazione Prada to Stage Arthur Jafa/Richard Prince Show in May 2026

Fondazione Prada to Stage Arthur Jafa/Richard Prince Show in May 2026

The Milan-based Fondazione Prada will stage a two-person exhibition of Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince at its Venice space during the upcoming Biennale. Opening to the public on May 9, the same day as the Biennale, the exhibition carries the title “Helter Skelter” and is curated by Nancy Spector, the former artistic director of the Guggenheim Museum. The exhibition will be organized around “a series of thematic juxtapositions” of both Prince’s and Jafa’s works that will “illuminate each of their practices and tease out shared subject matter and mutual obsessions,” according to a press release. It will also debut a “long creative conversation” between the two artists that has not been previously exhibited publicly. Related Articles The two artists, who were born a decade apart, are both known for mining pop culture to create their work and, per a release, “share an ethos of lawlessness when it comes to the appropriation and manipulation of images siphoned from movies, pulp novels, comic books, YouTube videos, sci-fi stories, album covers, record sleeves, rock ‘n’ roll posters, first-edition …