Loading Spinner

Phillip Rick Dingus Sold at Auction Prices

Photographer

See Artist Details

0 Lots

Sort By:

Categories

    Auction Date

    Seller

    Seller Location

    Price Range

    to
    • Rick Dingus (b. 1951), Desert landscape and Rocks with a small knife, 1977-1979, 2 pieces, Photograph and graphite on paper, Image of larger: 15” H x 14.5” W
      Oct. 30, 2024

      Rick Dingus (b. 1951), Desert landscape and Rocks with a small knife, 1977-1979, 2 pieces, Photograph and graphite on paper, Image of larger: 15” H x 14.5” W

      Est: $100 - $200

      Rick Dingus (b. 1951) Two works: Desert landscape, 1977 Photograph and graphite on paper Signed and dated lower right: Rick Dingus Rocks with a small knife, 1979 Photograph and graphite on paper Signed and dated lower right: Rick Dingus

      John Moran Auctioneers
    • RICK DINGUS Fitch
      Sep. 30, 2020

      RICK DINGUS Fitch

      Est: $900 - $1,200

      RICK DINGUS Fitch's Land near Santa Fe N.M., 1984, 16x20" Graphite on Gelatin Silver Print. Signed titled dated pencil verso. ASG # RD/1050 Here Rick Dingus is photographing near the property of another legendary Rephotographic Survey member Steve Fitch, located about 30 miles south of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Rick Dingus (b. 1951) One of a handful of decisive American photographers who refashioned late 20th and early 21st century understanding of landscape and place, Dingus has long been interested in the paradoxes of time and place, the uncertain documentary authority of a photograph, and the flexible meanings of any image. He is best known for his altered landscape photographs of the 1970s & 1980s where he used graphite on his images. On his website Dingus writes about this work. "These are from an early series of black and white photo-drawings of 'landscapes' that posed questions about time, place, culture, and nature. I drew directly on the surface of the photographs with silver colored pencil and graphite. The surfaces invited viewers to participate because the images changed when viewed from different angles. The handmade marks disappeared or stood out and the details in the photographs also shifted as one moved while looking." credit http://rickdingus.com/bw_photo_drawings_text.php Rick Dingus was a graduate of the legendary photography program at the University of New Mexico in 1981 and joined the staff at Texas Tech University 1982 where he taught for 33 years. He had already worked on the Rephotographic Survey and had focused on the work of Timothy O'Sullivan. He received a National Endowment for the Arts/Mid-America Art Alliance Regional Fellowship in 1987. He was also a member of the Rephotographic Survey Project (1978-79) and more recently he worked on "Navajo Sacred Places," in conjunction with a Navajo oral history project. He writes extensively on contemporary photography. His publications include "Second View: The Rephotographic Survey" (University of New Mexico Press, 1984)

      Andrew Smith Gallery Photography Auctions, LLC
    • RICK DINGUS Sky Face Pictographs Utah 1982-3
      Sep. 30, 2020

      RICK DINGUS Sky Face Pictographs Utah 1982-3

      Est: $900 - $1,200

      RICK DINGUS Location of the "Sky Faces" pictographs, Horse Canyon Drainage Canyonlands, UT, 1982-83, 16x20" Graphite on Gelatin Silver Print. Signed, titled and dated pencil verso. ASG# RD/1048 Rick Dingus (b. 1951) One of a handful of decisive American photographers who refashioned late 20th and early 21st century understanding of landscape and place, Dingus has long been interested in the paradoxes of time and place, the uncertain documentary authority of a photograph, and the flexible meanings of any image. He is best known for his altered landscape photographs of the 1970s & 1980s where he used graphite on his images. On his website Dingus writes about this work. "These are from an early series of black and white photo-drawings of 'landscapes' that posed questions about time, place, culture, and nature. I drew directly on the surface of the photographs with silver colored pencil and graphite. The surfaces invited viewers to participate because the images changed when viewed from different angles. The handmade marks disappeared or stood out and the details in the photographs also shifted as one moved while looking." credit http://rickdingus.com/bw_photo_drawings_text.php Rick Dingus was a graduate of the legendary photography program at the University of New Mexico in 1981 and joined the staff at Texas Tech University in 1982 where he taught for 33 years. He had already worked on the Rephotographic Survey and had focused on the work of Timothy O'Sullivan. He received a National Endowment for the Arts/Mid-America Art Alliance Regional Fellowship in 1987. He was also a member of the Rephotographic Survey Project (1978-79) and more recently he worked on "Navajo Sacred Places," in conjunction with a Navajo oral history project. He writes extensively on contemporary photography. His publications include "Second View: The Rephotographic Survey" (University of New Mexico Press,1984)

      Andrew Smith Gallery Photography Auctions, LLC
    Lots Per Page: