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Edward Ruscha

Class of
2005
Edward Ruscha

Edward Ruscha

“I feel like anything I do in my art springs from attitudes I had when I was 16 years old living in the Sooner State.”
Ed Ruscha

Biography

Internationally recognized painter, printmaker, photographer, and filmmaker Edward Ruscha was born in Nebraska and came to Oklahoma City in 1941. He worked as a paperboy for The Daily Oklahoman and graduated of Northwest Classen High School in 1956 before moving to Los Angeles, California, to attend the Chouinard Art Institute (now the California Institute of the Arts) from 1956-1960. By the early sixties he was well known as an artist through the progressive Ferus Gallery group and later achieved recognition for his many outstanding photographic books – including his book Twenty-Six Gasoline Stations, containing photographs of gasoline stations along Route 66 between Oklahoma and Los Angeles, California, a painting of the landmark Hollywood sign, and other subjects. Architectural Digest named Ruscha among the most significant contributors to the world of art in the 20th century and he completed a 30-foot-by-12 foot painting, Picture Without Words, for the auditorium of the J. Paul Getty Museum in 1997.

Fun fact

The renowned gallery exhibit, The Drawings of Ed Ruscha, was launched in 2005 and has traveled to many prestigious locations around the country including the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Throughout his career, Ruscha’s work has been represented in all major museums and private collections throughout the U.S. and Europe.

Oklahoma connections

Ruscha moved to Oklahoma City with his family in 1941.

Hometown

Oklahoma CIty

Profession

Artist

Presenter

Born

1937

Died

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