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Jack Pierson Art for Sale and Sold Prices

b. 1960 -


Jack Pierson is an American photographer, sculptor, and draftsman. Considered to be exceptionally prolific and comfortable working with a variety of media, Pierson is best known for his photography, abstract sculptures, and collages. His favorite subjects are drawn mostly from his daily life as a contemporary artist, like fragments of urban landscapes, still lives of ordinary objects, homoerotic nudes, and evocative words worked into collages or transformed into neons.

Pierson was born in 1960 in Plymouth, MA. He received a BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston, MA, in 1984. Pierson is considered to be part of the Boston School, which is a term used to refer to a group of photographers who worked in Boston in the early 1980s, who had created a style of photography that centered on them photographing their mutual friends in intimate or casual settings.

His photographic works have often been compared to images from road movies, movies whose rapturous race toward fulfilment have become etched into the American landscape. Far from simply seeking to create traditional variations on the American Dream, the artist seeks instead to explore the flip side of the concept, searching to express what he calls ‘the tragedy inherent in the pursuit of glamour.’

He is openly gay, and many of his photographs are images of men shot in a casual, erotic fashion. In 2003, Pierson published Self Portrait, a book of photographs by features 15 images of beautiful men, arranged to suggest the arc of a lifetime – beginning with a young boy and progressing to old age with men in various stages of undress. None of the images is of the artist himself.

Pierson first began making his Word Sculptures in 1991, utilizing found objects – mismatched letters salvaged from junkyards, old movie marquees, roadside diners, Las Vegas casinos, and other forsaken enterprises. The word sculptures create individual words or phrases that evoke a multiplicity of meanings.

In 2006, inspired by an earlier series of pencil drawings he did from an old postcard of a woman’s face, Pierson produced a suite of twelve large-scale silkscreen paintings, all linearly graphic in black ink on diffused, off-white linen. Removed from its original and singular representation in a photograph, the portrayed woman’s facade is variously multiplied by hand and then enlarged by the machine-like reproduction of silkscreen. Pierson is also known for photographing noted celebrities and models, such as Snoop Dogg, Brad Pitt, Naomi Campbell, and Michael Bergin.

In 2004, his Self-Portrait series was part of the Whitney Biennial. Other examples of his work were shown in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, NY, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, MA, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Jack Pierson currently divides his time between his home and studio in the Southern California desert near Joshua Tree National Park and New York.

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About Jack Pierson

b. 1960 -

Biography


Jack Pierson is an American photographer, sculptor, and draftsman. Considered to be exceptionally prolific and comfortable working with a variety of media, Pierson is best known for his photography, abstract sculptures, and collages. His favorite subjects are drawn mostly from his daily life as a contemporary artist, like fragments of urban landscapes, still lives of ordinary objects, homoerotic nudes, and evocative words worked into collages or transformed into neons.

Pierson was born in 1960 in Plymouth, MA. He received a BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston, MA, in 1984. Pierson is considered to be part of the Boston School, which is a term used to refer to a group of photographers who worked in Boston in the early 1980s, who had created a style of photography that centered on them photographing their mutual friends in intimate or casual settings.

His photographic works have often been compared to images from road movies, movies whose rapturous race toward fulfilment have become etched into the American landscape. Far from simply seeking to create traditional variations on the American Dream, the artist seeks instead to explore the flip side of the concept, searching to express what he calls ‘the tragedy inherent in the pursuit of glamour.’

He is openly gay, and many of his photographs are images of men shot in a casual, erotic fashion. In 2003, Pierson published Self Portrait, a book of photographs by features 15 images of beautiful men, arranged to suggest the arc of a lifetime – beginning with a young boy and progressing to old age with men in various stages of undress. None of the images is of the artist himself.

Pierson first began making his Word Sculptures in 1991, utilizing found objects – mismatched letters salvaged from junkyards, old movie marquees, roadside diners, Las Vegas casinos, and other forsaken enterprises. The word sculptures create individual words or phrases that evoke a multiplicity of meanings.

In 2006, inspired by an earlier series of pencil drawings he did from an old postcard of a woman’s face, Pierson produced a suite of twelve large-scale silkscreen paintings, all linearly graphic in black ink on diffused, off-white linen. Removed from its original and singular representation in a photograph, the portrayed woman’s facade is variously multiplied by hand and then enlarged by the machine-like reproduction of silkscreen. Pierson is also known for photographing noted celebrities and models, such as Snoop Dogg, Brad Pitt, Naomi Campbell, and Michael Bergin.

In 2004, his Self-Portrait series was part of the Whitney Biennial. Other examples of his work were shown in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, NY, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, MA, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

Jack Pierson currently divides his time between his home and studio in the Southern California desert near Joshua Tree National Park and New York.