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Label Text Although this work is titled as a self-portrait, it does not depict a traditional image of the artist. Instead, Bickerton represents himself as the sum of the products he consumes and the organizations with which he associates himself. By explicitly using the marketing logos of his favorite things, he affiliates himself with corporate branding. The ubiquity of advertising is normal to today’s society, and most of these logos are instantly recognizable, but this work also strongly reflects the 1980s, when corporate images first seeped into almost every aspect of culture. Tormented Self-Portrait addresses the product the artist himself makes as well — the art object. The vinyl, handles, and pockets mock art handling equipment, and acknowledge the fact that art is often sold and moved many times over. Bickerton also includes his own logo along each side, with his name and “87/88”, branding the sculpture as a product of that particular art-world market season.
Bickerton was born in 1959 in Barbados, West Indies, and has lived and worked in New York. In 1982 he received his B.F.A. from the California Institute of Arts, and in 1985 he completed the Whitney Museum Independent Studies program. Most of his work is three-dimensional. For four years in the early 1980s Bickerton was the studio assistant for the painter, Jack Goldstein. Source: News, May June 1995
Exhibition HistoryAmsterdam, Stedelijk Museum, Horn of Plenty, Jan.-Feb. 1989, p. 24 (illustrated)

New York, Whitney Museum of American Art, 1989 Biennial Exhibition, April-July 1989, p. 27 (illustrated)

The Art Institute of Chicago, Affinities and Intuitions: The Gerald S. Elliott Collection of Contemporary Art, May-July 1990, p. 228, no. 12 (illustrated)

"Identity Crisis: Self-Portraiture at the End of the of the Century," Milwaukee Art Museum, WI, September 12-November 16, 1997

"The American Century: Art and Culture 1900-2000 (Part II), Whitney Museum of American Art, Sept. 23, 1999 - Feb. 29, 2000
Published ReferencesDean Sobel, "Identity Crisis: Self-Portraiture at the End of the Century," Milwaukee Art Museum, 1997, exh. cat. no.3, color ill. p.20 & 21

DMAC News, May/June 1995, ref. p.3, ill. front cover

AN UNCOMMON VISION: THE DES MOINES ART CENTER, Des Moines Art Center, 1998, ref. p.59, color ill. p.58

S. Caley, "Ashley Bickerton: A Precise Enunciation of the Entire Art Equation," Flash Art, Summer 1988, p. 153 (illustrated)

S. Caley, "Ashley Bickerton: A Revealing Exposé of the Application of Art," Flash Art, Nov.-Dec. 1988, p. 79-81

U.M. Reindl, "Horn of Plenty," Kunstforum International, April-May 1989, p. 408 (illustrated)

C. Leigh, "Into the Blue," Art & Auction, May 1989, p. 263 (illustrated)

I. Mussa, "Postmodernist Prophylaxis," The Journal of Art, June-July 1989, p. 9 (illustrated)

H. Cotter, "Report from New York," Art in America, Sept. 1989, p. 81

DimensionsOverall: 90 × 68 1/2 × 20 in. (228.6 × 174 × 50.8 cm)
Accession Number 1994.334
Classificationssculpture
ProvenanceArtist; (Daniel Weinberg Gallery, Los Angeles); Gerald S. Elliott, Chicago, IL; (Contemporary Art from the Estate of Gerald S. Elliott, Christie’s, London, November 3, 1994, lot no. 106); Des Moines Art Center [purchased from the previous, 1994]

Images (2)

Photo Credit: Gene Pittman, Courtesy of the Walker Art Center
Photo Credit: Gene Pittman, Courtesy of the Walker Art Center
Tormented Self-Portrait (Susie at Arles) No. 2
Photo Credit: Gene Pittman, Courtesy of the Walker Art Center
Photo Credit: Gene Pittman, Courtesy of the Walker Art Center
Photo Credit: Rich Sanders, Des Moines
Arman
ca. 1976
Photo Credit: Rich Sanders, Des Moines
Isabel Bishop
1958
Photo Credit: Michael Tropea, Chicago
George Segal
1971
Photo Credit: Rich Sanders, Des Moines
Betye Saar
1976
Photo Credit: Rich Sanders, Des Moines
Betye Saar
1968
Photo Credit: Richard Sanders, Des Moines
Yayoi Kusama
1963
Photo Credt: Sheldan C. Collins, Courtesy of the Whitney Museum of Art
Yayoi Kusama
1963
Photo Credit: Sheldan C. Collins, Courtesy of the Whitney Museum of Art
Yayoi Kusama
1963
Photo Credit: Rich Sanders, Des Moines
Tom Sachs
1995