ART-032 Ralph Goings — "Paul's Corner Cushion" Original Lithograph, 1972, Signed & Numbered in Pencil, Edition of 200, Photorealism
An important original lithograph by Ralph Goings (American, 1928–2016) — one of the founding figures of American Photorealism and a painter whose work is held in the permanent collections of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Titled Paul's Corner Cushion (1972), this lithograph is signed and numbered in pencil by the artist, from a limited edition of 200 — a characteristically intimate edition size for Goings' early print work. The 1972 date places this work at the very heart of the Photorealist movement's emergence: Goings, alongside Robert Bechtle, Chuck Close, Audrey Flack, and Richard Estes, was redefining what American painting could be, insisting that the ordinary — a diner booth, a pickup truck, a salt shaker — was worthy of the most rigorous artistic attention.
Goings built his practice on projecting 35mm color slides onto canvas and rendering them with uncanny precision in oil. His prints carry that same quality of hyper-attentive observation — an America seen without nostalgia or irony, simply as it is, luminous in its ordinariness. As fellow Photorealist Chuck Close said of him, his "methodology — the way he could make oil paint echo the veracity of a photograph — was nothing short of miraculous."
Details
- Artist: Ralph Goings (American, 1928–2016)
- Title: Paul's Corner Cushion
- Year: 1972
- Medium: Original lithograph
- Edition: Signed and numbered in pencil; edition of 200
- Condition: Toning and moisture marks to edges. Please review all photographs carefully.
This is a one-of-a-kind piece from our curated collection. Please use the Price Inquiry button above or contact us here for current pricing and availability.
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