
Raymond Pettibon: Surfers 1985–2014
Are Your Motives Pure?
Publisher: Venus Over Manhattan
Publication Date: 2014

Foreword by Adam Lindemann. Text by Carlo McCormick
Since the 1970s Raymond Pettibon (born 1957) has created a vocabulary of symbols that reappear consistently if enigmatically across his oeuvre. These range from baseball players, vixens, light bulbs, and railway trains to the cartoon character Gumby and infamous murderer Charles Manson. But the most poetic and revealing of Pettibon's symbols may be the surfer, the solitary longboarder challenging a massive wave. In his "surfer paintings," viewers ride along with a counterculture existentialist hero who perhaps is the artist's nearest proxy. Almost all of the works included in this volume depict an ocean roiling with chaotic swells, accompanied by nonsequiturs, quotations, and bits of poetry in the artist's handwriting. Among these works are early small-scale, monochrome India ink paintings; numerous paintings from the 1990s when the artist introduced color to his work; and a group of rare, large-scale paintings.
Details
Publisher: Venus Over Manhattan
Artist: Raymond Pettibon
Publication Date: 2014
ISBN: 9780990358619
Status: Out of print
Binding: Softcover
Dimensions: 8.5 x 11 in
Pages: 102
Reproductions: 74
Artist and Contributors
Raymond Pettibon
Raymond Pettibon’s (b. 1957) influential oeuvre engages a wide spectrum of American iconography. Intermixing image and text, his drawings engage the visual rhetorics of pop and commercial culture while incorporating language from mass media as well as classic texts by writers such as William Blake, Marcel Proust, John Ruskin, and Walt Whitman.
$200