Ed Ruscha
Untitled (#1) and Untitled (#2)

Untitled (#1) and Untitled (#2)

© Ed Ruscha

Untitled (#1) and Untitled (#2)
Untitled (#1) and Untitled (#2)
ArtistAmerican, born 1937
CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Untitled (#1) and Untitled (#2)
  • “Untitled (#1)” and “Untitled (#2)”
Date2007–2008
PlaceLos Angeles, California, United States
MediumAcrylic on canvas
DimensionsTwo canvases, each: 64 × 72 in. (162.6 × 182.9 cm)

Credit LineMuseum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment
Object number2008.110.A,.B
Not on view

Explore Further

Object Type
Description

Ed Ruscha’s landmark images of American culture incorporate graphic elements ubiquitous to the commercial realm. An innovator in the 1950s of the West Coast Pop movement, Ruscha transitioned away from the Pop Art sensibility in the 1960s and soon directed his focus to a more conceptual point of view as he began to explore the ways in which text and images influence meaning and interpretation.


In his Untitled (#1) and Untitled (#2) diptych, Ruscha exuberantly depicts the American sublime while subtly distorting such popular imagery with his use of text. On the left panel, Ruscha paints a crisp and monumental mountain peak with the letters “CO.” sprawled across its terrain; the image takes on an almost brochure-like quality as it welcomes tourists to take part in the rustic grandeur, presumably of Colorado. The right panel, however, offers an adverse scene, as an austere rooftop amputates the mountain peak and text, disturbing the serene landscape. Now the image appears congested, and the “CO.” alludes to Company in the commercial sense. With his jarring juxtapositions, Ruscha poignantly conveys the harm of modern industry’s appropriation of nature and satirizes the nation’s overconsumption.


ProvenancePurchased by MFAH, 2008.
Exhibition History"Ed Ruscha: Paintings," Gagosian Gallery, London, February 5 - March 20, 2008

"Second Nature: Contemporary Landscapes from the MFAH Collection," The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, July 10–September 25, 2011.

“Contemporary Art: Selections from the Museum’s Collection,” The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, July 3–September 21, 2014.
Inscriptions, Signatures and Marks
Signed verso of both canvases. .A: "Ed Ruscha / 2007 / UNTITLED (#1)"; .B: "Ed Ruscha / 2007 - 08 / UNTITLED (#2)"
.A: Edward Ruscha studio label on verso, stretcher bar: "UNTITLED (#1) 2007 / ACRYLIC ON CANVAS / 64 x 72" (163 x 183 cm) / BY EDWARD RUSHCA STUDIO #: P2007.29"
Gagosian Gallery label on verso, stretcher bar: "EDWARD RUSCHA / Untitled #1/Untitled #2, 2008 / Acrylic on canvas, diptych / Each canvas: 64 x 72 inches / Each canvas: 163 x 183 cm / (RUSCH 2008.0001) / Panel 1 of 2 / P.2007.29"

.B: Edward Ruscha studio label on verso, stretcher bar: "UNTITLED (#2) 2007-2008 / ACRYLIC ON CANVAS / 64 x 72" (163 x 183 cm) / BY EDWARD RUSHCA STUDIO #: P2008.01"
Gagosian Gallery label on verso, stretcher bar: "EDWARD RUSCHA / Untitled #1/Untitled #2, 2008 / Acrylic on canvas, diptych / Each canvas: 64 x 72 inches / Each canvas: 163 x 183 cm / (RUSCH 2008.0001) / Panel 2 of 2 / P.2008.01"

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

If you have questions about this work of art or the MFAH Online Collection please contact us.

Mysteries
Ed Ruscha
1987
Oil on canvas
2014.673
Untitled
Ed Moses
1986
Oil and acrylic on canvas
2007.623
Jesus on the Road to Emmaus
Ed Blackburn
1991
Oil on canvas
2003.67
Hera, No. 2
Cleve Gray
1968
Acrylic on canvas
2022.125
Study for  "In Black and White #2"
Robert Motherwell
1975
Acrylic on canvas panel
2001.619
Untitled
Joseph Glasco
c. 1983
Acrylic and collaged canvas on canvas
2006.199
Untitled, No. 4
Joseph Glasco
1989
Acrylic and collaged canvas on canvas
96.799
August 1, 1982
Charles Mary Kubricht
1982
Acrylic on canvas
92.164
#1 Super Cry Baby
Michael Miller
2007
Acrylic on canvas
2008.37
Holocaust Triptych No. 1
Cleve Gray
1989
Acrylic on canvas
91.1420
A Letter
John Walker
1976
Acrylic, gel, and canvas on canvas
2007.704
Screen
Joseph Glasco
1983
Acrylic and collaged canvas on canvas
85.4