作品を販売する
ウィッシュリスト ショッピングカート Cart
x
プレビュープレビュー ARで試着ARで試着 プリントを購入 プリントを購入手描きの絵画を購入 手描きの絵画を購入 シェアするシェアする
詳細を見る詳細を見る お気に入りに追加 お気に入りに追加 ダウンロードダウンロード 似ている作品似ている作品 X線調査X線調査 スライドショースライドショー

Windows

Explore the vibrant paintings of Richard Allen Morris (b. 1933), a San Diego-based artist known for his Pop Art, Abstract Expressionism influences & playful explorations of art history. Discover his unique style and retrospective acclaim.

オンラインプレビューをはるかに凌ぐ、高解像度で鮮明なデジタル画像をご購入いただけます。

各ファイルは、社内の専門家が高度なツールと熟練した手作業によるレタッチを用いて、細心の注意を払って準備されています。すべての画像において、卓越した鮮明度、正確な色彩再現性、そして繊細なディテールを保証いたします。

最終ファイルは、プロフェッショナルな編集・印刷環境ですぐにご利用いただけるよう最適化された状態で、72時間以内にメールにてお届けいたします。これは、一流のデザインスタジオ、出版社、ギャラリーから信頼されているものと同等の品質です。

デジタルアート

個人での鑑賞、印刷、クリエイティブなプロジェクト用に、高解像度ファイルをダウンロードできます。 (プリントを購入 プリントを購入手描きの絵画を購入 手描きの絵画を購入)

最終合計金額

$ 24.90

デジタル画像のご注文に付随する特典

高品質なデジタル画像配信を、確かな品質で。

Most-Famous-Paintings.com を選ぶことは、単に画像を手に入れることではありません。それは、プロの手によって精密に仕上げられ、満足保証が付いた高品質なデジタルアートワークを受け取ることを意味します。ご注文いただいた際に自動的に付随する内容は、以下の通りです:

shipping_icon
メールですぐにお届け

ご注文から72時間以内に、高解像度のデジタル画像ファイルがメールでお手元に届きます。すぐにそのままご利用いただけます。

canvas_icon
AI技術で最適化されたデジタルファイル

お客様の作品は、高度なAIツールと専門家による手作業の編集を組み合わせてプロフェッショナルに最適化されており、細部のディテール、鮮明さ、そして正確な色再現性を最大限に引き出しています。

insurance_icon
一生涯無料の再送サービス

ファイルを誤って削除したり、紛失してしまったりしましたか?ご安心ください。いつでも無料で再送いたします。

tax_icon
輸入手数料は一切かかりません

関税や手数料、配送料を気にすることなく、お気に入りのアートワークをすぐにお楽しみいただけます。デジタルダウンロードは常に免税です。

color_icon
色彩再現の保証

プロ仕様のツールとカラーマネジメント技術を用いることで、デジタル画像が元の色を最大限に忠実に再現することを保証いたします。

return_icon
60日間満足保証

ご購入いただいたデジタル画像にご満足いただけない場合は、60日以内であれば、修正または100%の返金(理由を問う必要はありません)をさせていただきます。

guarantee_icon
100% 返金保証

ご満足いただけない場合は、デジタルファイルを受け取ってから60日以内であれば、理由を問わず全額返金いたします。

discount_icon
まとめ買い割引

3枚購入で10%OFF - 5枚購入で15%OFF - 10枚以上購入で20%OFF。クリエイティブなプロジェクト、ギャラリー、エージェンシーに最適です。


作家の略歴

Dorothy Iannone: A Transgressive Visionary

Dorothy Iannone, born in Boston, Massachusetts in 1933, emerged from a deeply rooted Italian-American household as an artist profoundly shaped by both tradition and rebellion. Her early life, marked by her Catholic upbringing under her fiercely independent mother, Sarah Pucci, instilled within her a complex relationship with authority and a willingness to challenge established norms – qualities that would become central to her artistic practice. This foundation, coupled with extensive travels throughout Europe, North Africa, and Asia with her husband, James Upham, provided a rich tapestry of cultural influences that profoundly impacted the development of her uniquely visceral and often controversial work. Iannone’s journey wasn't one of formal training; she was largely self-taught, yet her artistic vision blossomed through experimentation and a relentless pursuit of expressing her inner world—a world frequently explored with unflinching honesty and unapologetic sexuality. The initial censorship faced when her copy of Henry Miller’s *Tropic of Cancer* was seized by U.S. Customs served as a crucial early battleground in her fight for artistic freedom, foreshadowing the ongoing challenges she would encounter throughout her career.

The Emergence of “People” and Early Censorship

Iannone's artistic trajectory began in 1959 with large-scale abstract paintings that gradually incorporated text from writers like Wallace Stevens, William Butler Yeats, and Gerard Manley Hopkins. This marked a significant shift towards integrating language into her visual narratives. By 1966, she was producing the iconic “People” – small, flat wood sculptures depicting beloved actors, writers, mythic figures, and historical personalities, each adorned with subtly drawn-on genitalia. These works, initially deemed pornographic by authorities, became a focal point of censorship battles. Despite repeated confiscations and attempts to suppress her art, Iannone fiercely defended her creations as expressions of personal experience and a critique of societal constraints on sexuality and representation. The controversy surrounding the “People” solidified her position as a defiant artist challenging conventional notions of beauty and morality. This period also saw the founding of the Stryke Gallery with Upham, establishing a vital platform for showcasing emerging artists within New York’s downtown scene and fostering connections with influential figures like Robert Filliou and George Brecht – individuals deeply involved in the Fluxus movement.

Fluxus, European Connections, and Artistic Collaboration

Iannone's engagement with Fluxus proved particularly formative. Her travels with Emmett Williams to Iceland in 1967, documenting the work of Dieter Roth, exposed her to the movement’s core principles of spontaneity, collaboration, and a blurring of boundaries between art and life. This experience deepened her understanding of performance-based art and fostered a spirit of experimentation that permeated her subsequent work. Crucially, she cultivated lasting friendships with European artists like Felix Gonzalez-Torres and Madeline Gins, whose shared commitment to challenging established artistic conventions provided a crucial intellectual and emotional context for her own explorations. These collaborations broadened her perspective and contributed to the development of her distinctive visual language—a language characterized by its raw emotion, layered symbolism, and often unsettling juxtapositions. The influence of these European artists is evident in Iannone’s later work, particularly in her use of text and image as intertwined elements within complex narrative structures.

“I Was Thinking Of You” and Critical Recognition

The turning point in Iannone's career arrived in 2005 with the inclusion of “I Was Thinking Of You,” (1975/2005), colloquially known as "the orgasm box," in The Wrong Gallery’s exhibition at Tate Modern, followed by its prominent placement in The Whitney Biennial. This recognition brought her work to a wider audience and signaled a shift from relative obscurity to critical acclaim. “I Was Thinking Of You,” a meticulously constructed assemblage of photographs, text fragments, and found objects, exemplifies Iannone's signature style—a potent blend of eroticism, psychological introspection, and social commentary. The exhibition at the New Museum in 2009, "Dorothy Iannone: Lioness," further cemented her status as a significant figure in contemporary art, showcasing a retrospective that highlighted the breadth and depth of her artistic output over several decades.

Legacy and Continuing Exploration

Despite facing persistent censorship and navigating the challenges inherent in being a female artist working outside traditional boundaries, Dorothy Iannone has remained a fiercely independent and uncompromising voice throughout her career. Her work continues to provoke, challenge, and inspire, offering a powerful meditation on themes of sexuality, identity, power, and the complexities of human experience. Her legacy lies not only in the provocative nature of her art but also in her unwavering commitment to artistic freedom and her willingness to push the boundaries of what is considered acceptable or palatable within the art world. Today, Iannone continues to create, demonstrating a remarkable resilience and an enduring passion for exploring the depths of human consciousness through her singular visual language.
richard allen morris

richard allen morris

1933 - , United States of America

プロフィール概要

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Ecstatic unity
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist:
    • Fluxus
    • Joe Brainard
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist:
    • Wallace Stevens
    • William Butler Yeats
  • Date Of Birth: 1933
  • Full Name: Dorothy Iannone
  • Nationality: American
  • Notable Artworks:
    • I Was Thinking Of You
    • Lioness
  • Place Of Birth: Boston, MA, USA