Denver
Whenever I travel I like to check in advance to see if there are any cool museums I should hit. I often am wanting to see the architecture as much as the art. In 2009 I hit the jackpot with the Denver Museum of Art. It’s an amazing structure that had amazing art inside. One of the pieces there was this one, ‘Molten Polyester’ by Ed Ruscha. I hadn’t seen any of his work in decades, since I had been in graduate school. I had no idea he was doing these larger pieces with epic mountains and words and it resparked my interest in his work.
Molton Polyester – 2005
Words
As a Napkin Kin you know how much I like words and that almost every napkin is a combination of words and images. Then it’s no surprise that one of my favorite artists over the years has been Ed Ruscha. His use of words, sometimes laid over recognizable images and sometimes just on a gradient of color, have always been compelling and thought provoking to me.
Ed Ruscha by Dennis Hopper. 1964
Ferus Gallery
His first recognition as an artist came in the 60s when he had his first show at Ferus Gallery, a groundbreaking space in LA that championed a number of California artists, including Robert Irwin and Richard Diebenkorn, already in the ‘Artists I Love’ series.
Large Trademark with Eight Spotlights, 1961
Ruscha was firmly in the grips of the new pop art aesthetic when he started. He liked using the images of the world he saw, mundane and non-elitist, similar to Warhol, Johns and Lichtenstein.

Ed Ruscha – Standard Station, 1963

Ed Ruscha – Burning Standard Station, 1965-1966

Ed Ruscha, Los Angeles County Museum On Fire – 1965-68
Liquid Words
In the late 60s Ruscha started doing paintings of liquid in the shape of words.
Lisp – 1968

Ripe – 1967

Adios – 1967
Unconventional Media
The painting of fruit juice or honey to look realistic is one thing, but taking non-art materials and actually using them as your art-making material was another step. Ruscha, influenced by Duchamp’s readymades and other artists using found objects, started to do the same. One of his most interesting series in that vein is the gunpowder series. It’s simple enough, he drew with gunpowder instead of graphite. It looks the same in many ways but he liked something about it’s texture and how he could work with it. It was not lost on him however that simply using the word ‘gunpowder’ in his list of materials was part of the artwork and the meaning.
Quit – Gunpowder and colored pencil on paper – 1967

Self – Gunpowder on paper – 1967

Eye – Gunpowder on paper – 1970
No Words
He also started doing work with no words at all.
Man Wife – 1987

Strong Healthy – 1987
Sentences
Eventually Ruscha started to incorporate whole sentences into his work. They were mundane and unremarkable in their reference to the everyday world but when disembodied from their usual context became rich in possible meanings. As usual though, there wasn’t any one interpretation that was right or wrong.
Pay Nothing Until April, 2003

I Don’t Want No Retro Spective – 1979

The Act of Letting A Person Into Your Home – 1983

Tulsa – 1967 – Gunpowder on paper

OK – 1990 – Lithography

Tulsa Slut – 2002 – Acrylic on canvas

No Man’s Land – 1990 – Acrylic on canvas
Meaning and Questioning
One of the questions that gets asked about Ruscha’s work has to do with meaning. What is he trying to say, what does he mean? I think the best way to understand Ruscha’s meaning is to replace the word ‘meaning’ with ‘question’ since he isn’t really much of an answerer or a propagandist. He reminds me of a visual Paul Simon. Simon’s lyrics often stop short of an clear storyline, instead they give pictures and hints about meaning. Ruscha does the same thing and that’s why he is an artist I love.
In 2013 Ruscha was named one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people.
Resources
This is not a exhaustive showing of his work or explanation of his place in contemporary art or art history. There are incredible resources to explore if you are interested in finding out more about his work and life. Here are just a few. Ed Ruscha’s L.A. – The New Yorker, July 1st, 2013 Ed Ruscha – Catalogue Raisonne Ferus Gallery history – Archives of American ArtMore Artists I Love
The entire ‘Artists I Love’ series can be found below or by clicking on the ‘Artist I love’ link at the top of the page. Winter/Spring 2015- Week #2 – Ed Ruscha
- Week #1 – Robert Arneson
- Week #5 – Francisco Goya
- Week #4 – Robert Irwin
- Week #3 – Veruschka
- Week #2 – Albrecht Durer
- Week #1 – Roger Brown
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