Keith Haring (after) - Untitled - Offset lithography - TeNeues lithographic print





Add to your favourites to get an alert when the auction starts.

Eight years experience valuing posters, previously valuer at Balclis, Barcelona.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 129382 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Description from the seller
Keith Haring Offset Lithograph (*)
Reproduction of the work “Untitled,” screen print made by K. Haring in 1989.
Printed on thick Fine Art cardboard.
Published by teNeues Publishing Company, New York.
Print authorized by “The State of Keith Haring” in Germany, with copyright seal from the Foundation on the lower right edge.
- Sheet dimensions: 80 x 60 cm
- Image dimensions: 54.5 x 54.5 cm
- Year: 2000
- Condition: Excellent (this work has never been framed or exhibited, always kept in a professional art folder, therefore offered in excellent condition).
- Provenance: Private collection.
The work will be carefully handled and packed in reinforced cardboard packaging. The shipment will be trackable with a tracking number.
The shipment will also include transport insurance for the final value of the work with full reimbursement in case of loss or damage, at no cost to the buyer.
(*) Keith Haring was born in 1958 in Reading, Pennsylvania, United States.
He grew up in Kutztown and, from a young age, showed a strong interest in art. He studied graphic design at The Ivy School of Professional Art in Pittsburg, and at 19, openly gay, he moved to New York, where he found inspiration in graffiti art and enrolled at the School of Visual Arts, where he was influenced by Keith Sonnler and Joseph Kossuth, who encouraged him to train as a conceptual artist after experimentation with form and color.
Haring drew public attention in 1980, when he began to doodle cartoon-like images with a marker in the subways of the Big Apple, and later painted with white chalks comic strips on black panels used for advertising, which earned him more than one arrest.
His clean lines, vivid colors, and active figures carried strong messages about life and unity, and his exhibitions were photographed by Tseng Kwong Chi.
Around this time he organized an exhibition at Club 57 and participated in a show in Times Square, where he drew animals and human faces for the first time.
His first solo exhibition was at Tony Shafrazi Gallery in 1981, the same year he took part in the Documenta 7 exhibition in Kassel, Germany.
In 1982 he befriended emerging artists of the era such as Kenny Scharf, Madonna and Jean-Michel Basquiat, and even met the famous Andy Warhol.
In 1984 Haring went to Australia and painted several murals in Melbourne and Sydney, and he even received payment for his work from the National Gallery of Victoria and the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art.
He also visited and painted in Rio de Janeiro, the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris, Minneapolis and Manhattan.
During this period he even designed a pink jacket that Madonna wore to perform her song “Like a Virgin” on the show “Solid Gold.”
In 1985, the Museum of Modern Art in Bordeaux held an exhibition of his work, and he also participated in the Paris Biennale.
He appeared in November of that year on MTV, where he painted on a program hosted by his friend Nick Rhodes, from the group Duran Duran.
In 1986 he painted murals in Amsterdam, Paris, Phoenix and Berlin, also painted the body of Grace Jones for her music video for the song “I’m Not Perfect,” and opened a shop to sell his works in SOHO.
By then, his works began to reflect the sociopolitical issues of the time such as anti-Apartheid, AIDS and drugs.
He also created pop art pieces for brands like Absolut Vodka, Lucky Strike and Coca-Cola, and even designed the cover of the charitable album “A Very Special Christmas,” on which his friend Madonna was involved.
In 1988 he was included in a select list of artists whose works appeared on Chateau Mouton Rothschild wine labels, and that same year he was diagnosed with AIDS, which led, a year later, to founding the Keith Haring Foundation, whose goal was to fight social problems related to this disease and to raise awareness of the artist’s work through exhibitions, publications and licenses of his work.
In June 1989 he painted his last public work on a wall of the San Antonio Convent in Pisa. This work was titled “Tuttomondo.”
Keith Haring died on February 16, 1990, at the early age of 32, a victim of AIDS.
Seller's Story
Keith Haring Offset Lithograph (*)
Reproduction of the work “Untitled,” screen print made by K. Haring in 1989.
Printed on thick Fine Art cardboard.
Published by teNeues Publishing Company, New York.
Print authorized by “The State of Keith Haring” in Germany, with copyright seal from the Foundation on the lower right edge.
- Sheet dimensions: 80 x 60 cm
- Image dimensions: 54.5 x 54.5 cm
- Year: 2000
- Condition: Excellent (this work has never been framed or exhibited, always kept in a professional art folder, therefore offered in excellent condition).
- Provenance: Private collection.
The work will be carefully handled and packed in reinforced cardboard packaging. The shipment will be trackable with a tracking number.
The shipment will also include transport insurance for the final value of the work with full reimbursement in case of loss or damage, at no cost to the buyer.
(*) Keith Haring was born in 1958 in Reading, Pennsylvania, United States.
He grew up in Kutztown and, from a young age, showed a strong interest in art. He studied graphic design at The Ivy School of Professional Art in Pittsburg, and at 19, openly gay, he moved to New York, where he found inspiration in graffiti art and enrolled at the School of Visual Arts, where he was influenced by Keith Sonnler and Joseph Kossuth, who encouraged him to train as a conceptual artist after experimentation with form and color.
Haring drew public attention in 1980, when he began to doodle cartoon-like images with a marker in the subways of the Big Apple, and later painted with white chalks comic strips on black panels used for advertising, which earned him more than one arrest.
His clean lines, vivid colors, and active figures carried strong messages about life and unity, and his exhibitions were photographed by Tseng Kwong Chi.
Around this time he organized an exhibition at Club 57 and participated in a show in Times Square, where he drew animals and human faces for the first time.
His first solo exhibition was at Tony Shafrazi Gallery in 1981, the same year he took part in the Documenta 7 exhibition in Kassel, Germany.
In 1982 he befriended emerging artists of the era such as Kenny Scharf, Madonna and Jean-Michel Basquiat, and even met the famous Andy Warhol.
In 1984 Haring went to Australia and painted several murals in Melbourne and Sydney, and he even received payment for his work from the National Gallery of Victoria and the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art.
He also visited and painted in Rio de Janeiro, the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris, Minneapolis and Manhattan.
During this period he even designed a pink jacket that Madonna wore to perform her song “Like a Virgin” on the show “Solid Gold.”
In 1985, the Museum of Modern Art in Bordeaux held an exhibition of his work, and he also participated in the Paris Biennale.
He appeared in November of that year on MTV, where he painted on a program hosted by his friend Nick Rhodes, from the group Duran Duran.
In 1986 he painted murals in Amsterdam, Paris, Phoenix and Berlin, also painted the body of Grace Jones for her music video for the song “I’m Not Perfect,” and opened a shop to sell his works in SOHO.
By then, his works began to reflect the sociopolitical issues of the time such as anti-Apartheid, AIDS and drugs.
He also created pop art pieces for brands like Absolut Vodka, Lucky Strike and Coca-Cola, and even designed the cover of the charitable album “A Very Special Christmas,” on which his friend Madonna was involved.
In 1988 he was included in a select list of artists whose works appeared on Chateau Mouton Rothschild wine labels, and that same year he was diagnosed with AIDS, which led, a year later, to founding the Keith Haring Foundation, whose goal was to fight social problems related to this disease and to raise awareness of the artist’s work through exhibitions, publications and licenses of his work.
In June 1989 he painted his last public work on a wall of the San Antonio Convent in Pisa. This work was titled “Tuttomondo.”
Keith Haring died on February 16, 1990, at the early age of 32, a victim of AIDS.
