Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 5

Patty Carroll
Gone Postal by Patty Carroll, 2023, Archival Pigment Print, Photography

2023

About the Item

Gone Postal by Patty Carroll presents a chaotic scene, a room filled with orange, yellow and green luggage and scattered with postcards seeming to fall from above. A woman lies amidst the mess, leaning on the suitcases while she is covered in postcards. This photograph's image size is 22 x 22 inches, with the sheet size measuring at 30 x 30 inches. It is listed as an archival pigment print and is available in an edition of 15. More sizes are available with varying editions. The photograph is signed, titled, dated and numbered by Patty Carroll. Patty Carroll is an American photographer who has taught and practiced photography since the 1970’s. Her photography is characterized as vivid and boldly colored. Where her earlier works include typologies and portraiture, her new work symbolically expresses the domestic roles of women, via the series, Invisible Women. She earned a BFA in Graphic Design from the University of Illinois and in 1972, she graduated with a Master of Science in Photography from the Institute of Design at IIT, Chicago. Since receiving her MS in Photography, Carroll has been teaching photography at universities worldwide. She has been a professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Columbia College and the Royal College of Art in London, among other schools. Carroll’s photography has been exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago, The Art Institute in Chicago, White Box Museum in Beijing, and The Photographers Association in Ningbo, China. Her work has received many merits, publications, and grants. In 2014, she was listed in Photolucida’s “Top 50” after her most recent series, “Anonymous Women.” The series became a published book by Daylight Books in 2016. This is the latest of her five photographic books. Her work has also been published worldwide by organizations like The Huffington Post, Dallas Morning News, and The British Journal of Photography. In 2003, the Illinois Arts Council awarded her the Artist Fellowship Grant for her work.
  • Creator:
    Patty Carroll (1946, American)
  • Creation Year:
    2023
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 30 in (76.2 cm)Width: 30 in (76.2 cm)Depth: 0.01 in (0.26 mm)
  • More Editions & Sizes:
    Sheet size: 22 x 17 in., Image size: 15 x 15 in., Edition of 15Price: $1,200Sheet size: 36 x 36 in., Image size: 30 x 30 in., Edition of 10Price: $3,000Sheet size: 40 x 40 in. Image size: 38 x 38 in., Edition of 10Price: $4,000
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Dallas, TX
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU21512850022

More From This Seller

View All
Pie Eyed - Color Photograph, Kitchen, Food, Woman Artist, Dessert
By Patty Carroll
Located in Dallas, TX
Pie-eyed by Patty Carroll is a color photograph depicting a woman in a red and white colored kitchen, surrounded by various baked desserts. Archival Pigment Print Edition of 15 Sign...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Mad Mauve - Limited Edition Color Photograph, Woman Artist, Pink, Fabric
By Patty Carroll
Located in Dallas, TX
Mad Mauve by Patty Carroll presents a monotoned scene. A figure reclines in a mauve chair, draped with mauve fabric that falls from the ceiling. The figure...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

White Ibis with Fish by Cheryl Medow, 2014, Archival Pigment Print, Photography
By Cheryl Medow
Located in Dallas, TX
White Ibis with Fish by Cheryl Medow is a color photograph of a white bird with orange legs walking across a beach, carrying a green fish in it's beak. Image size: 10.4 x 13 in. Pa...
Category

2010s Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Bird Told Me, from the series Anonymous Women - Mannequin, Dove, White, Blue
By Patty Carroll
Located in Dallas, TX
Bird Told Me by Patty Carroll is a color photograph of a woman dressed in white and blue sitting in a chair, surrounded by white birds figures and patterns. Archival Pigment Print I...
Category

2010s Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Panther - Limited Edition Color Photograph, Woman Artist, Interior, Decor
By Patty Carroll
Located in Dallas, TX
Panther is a color photograph of a staged panther themed room, created by photographer Patty Carroll. This scene consists of a mannequin, representing a woman, laying on a couch surr...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Rosey
By Patty Carroll
Located in Dallas, TX
Edition of 15 Archival pigment print Paper size: 30 x 30 in., Image size: 22 x 22 in. Signed by Patty Carroll From the series, Anonymous Women Patty Carroll is an American photograp...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

You May Also Like

Silvereye - Metallic Painted Nude, Fine Art Photography, 1995
By Guido Argentini
Located in Vienna, AT
'Silverye' depicts a nude model covered in silver paint in a symmetric, acrobatic pose, photographed by Guido Argentini. All prints are limited edition. Available in multiple sizes....
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Letter E ( 27 x 40" / 68 x 102cm )
By Christian Stoll
Located in San Francisco, CA
LETTER E by Christian Stoll large scale conceptual photography playing with viewer's perspective incredible details in this body of work, a series of environmental stills playing w...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

Archival Paper, Photographic Paper, Archival Pigment

Candy Lips II, 21st century, contemporary, photography
By Sylvie Blum
Located in München, BY
Edition 10 Beautiful red and yellow colored open lips facing each other. As a woman and an artist, Austrian-born Sylvie Blum offers a unique perspective on the female form. Each im...
Category

2010s Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Milk One, 21st century, contemporary, photography
By Sylvie Blum
Located in München, BY
Edition 10 A female model is splattered with milk on her head. She stands in front of a white background. As a woman and an artist, Austrian-born Sylvie Blum offers a unique perspec...
Category

2010s Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Mona Lisa Make-Up, Mona Lisa getting a glow-up, Fine Art Photography, 2018
By Tyler Shields
Located in Vienna, AT
Mona Lisa getting a Make over with the pencil with red paint or lipgloss on it, photographed by Tyler Shields in 2018. All prints are limited edition. Available in multiple sizes. ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Photography

Materials

Archival Pigment

Large Scale Photograph Archival Pigment Print, Detroit Color Photo Doug Rickard
By Doug Rickard
Located in Surfside, FL
Doug Rickard (American b.1968) Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print. Features the work titled; A New American Picture - Detroit. Signed on verso and numbered 4/5. Work: 26 in. x 41 1/2 in. Frame: 26 1/2 in. x 42 in. Doug Rickard’s A New American Picture offers a startling and fresh perspective on American street photography. All of the images are appropriated from Google Street View; over a period of two years, Rickard took advantage of the technology platform’s comprehensive image archive to virtually drive the unseen and overlooked roads of America, bleak places that are forgotten, economically devastated, and abandoned. With an informed and deliberate eye, Rickard finds and decodes these previously photographed scenes of urban and rural decay. A New American Picture depicts American street scenes, located using the internet platform Google Street View. Over a four-year period, Rickard took advantage of Google’s massive image archive to virtually explore the roads of America looking for forgotten, economically devastated, and largely abandoned places. After locating and composing scenes of urban and rural decay, Rickard re-photographed the images on his computer screen with a tripod- mounted camera, freeing the image from its technological origins and re-presenting them on a new documentary plane. The low-resolution images that Rickard favors have a dissolved, painterly effect, and are occasionally populated with figures who acknowledge the camera, but whose faces are blurred, masking their identity. The photographs are thus imbued with an added surrealism and anonymity, which reinforces the isolation of the subjects and emphasizes the effects of an increasingly stratified American social structure. Rickard’s work evokes a connection to the tradition of American street photography, with knowing references to Walker Evans, Robert Frank and Stephen Shore. He both follows and advances that tradition, with a documentary strategy that acknowledges an increasingly technological world—a world in which a camera mounted on a moving car can generate evidence of the people and places it is leaving behind. Collectively, these images present a photographic portrait of the socially disenfranchised and economically powerless, those living an inversion of the American Dream.Doug Rickard (born 1968) is an American artist and photographer. He uses technologies such as Google Street View and YouTube to find images, which he then photographs on his computer monitor. His photography has been published in books, exhibited in galleries and held in the permanent collection of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Rickard is best known for his book A New American Picture (2010). He is founder and publisher of the website on contemporary photography, American Suburb X, and the website These Americans which publishes some of his collection of found photographs. This work features a black, African American man in the foreground walking in a bleak neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. Rickard was born in San Jose, California and brought up in Los Gatos in the San Francisco Bay Area. His father was a prominent pastor and many family members were preachers and missionaries, with a "very Reaganesque, patriotic view of America", a country "special and unique". Rickard studied United States history—slavery, civil rights—and sociology, at University of California, San Diego, and "lost his faith in this family vision. His adult view of America was a land not just of great achievement but also of massive injustice." At age 12 he witnessed his father having a secret extramarital affair, that years later in 1988 he confessed to his congregation. Rickard says this experience prompted him "to look for the fault lines in the American dream." He lives in Shingle Springs, near Sacramento, California. For his series A New American Picture, Rickard "wanted to look at the state of the country in these areas where opportunity is non-existent and where everything is broken down", where "the American dream was shattered or impossible to achieve". It is said that this work comments on United States politics, poverty, racial equality and the socioeconomic climate, class; the use of technology in art, privacy, surveillance, and the large quantity of images on the web. He cites as influences the photobooks American Photographs (1938) by Walker Evans, The Americans (1958) by Robert Frank, Uncommon Places (1982) by Stephen Shore and American Night (2003) by Paul Graham. The work was first exhibited as part of Anonymes: Unnamed American in Photography and Film, curated by David Campany and Diane Dufour at Le Bal, Paris, in 2010. To mark that occasion Rickard produced the first edition of the book, with the publisher White Press. Its first American museum show was at New York's Museum of Modern Art. Select Publications: Aperture Remix. New York: Aperture, 2012. A series of books made in homage to another Aperture publication, each in an edition of 5 copies. Rickard's was a response to Uncommon Places by Stephen Shore. The other publications were by Rinko Kawauchi, Vik Muniz, Alec Soth, Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs, Martin Parr, Viviane Sassen, Penelope Umbrico and James Welling. Produced in conjunction with the exhibition Aperture Remix. A New American Picture. Nazraeli Press Six by Six, set 4 v. 5. Portland, OR: Nazraeli, 2012. Edition of 100 copies. The other volumes are by Robert and Kerstin Adams, Edward Burtynsky, Kenro Izu, Catherine Opie and Issei Suda. Staking Claim: a California Invitational. San Francisco: Modernbook, 2013. Photographs by Rickard as well as Matthew Brandt, Susan Burnstine, Eric William Carroll, John Chiara, Chris Engman, Robbert Flick, Todd Hido, Siri Kaur, Mona Kuhn, Matt Lipps, David Maisel, Klea McKenna, Mark Ruwedel, Paul Schiek and Christina Seely. Catalogue of an exhibition held at the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, CA. Select Exhibitions: Solo exhibition 2012: Yossi Milo Gallery, New York, October–November 2012. Group Exhibitions 2010: Anonymes: L’Amérique sans nom: Photographie et Cinéma (Anonymous: Unnamed America in Photography and Film), Le Bal, Paris, September–December 2010. A thematic exhibition with works by Rickard as well as Jeff Wall, Walker Evans, Chauncey Hare, Lewis Baltz, Standish Lawder, Sharon Lockhart...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Color Photography

Materials

Photographic Paper, Archival Pigment

Recently Viewed

View All