Richard Hambleton Canadian, 1952-2017
Double Shadow Head, Gold is among the most ambitious and visually arresting works Richard Hambleton produced in the final years of his life - a large-scale diptych composition that brings together two of his signature Shadow Head silhouettes against a field of luminous metallic gold. It is a work that stands at the intersection of two seemingly opposed traditions: the raw, gestural urgency of New York street art and the long history of gold as the ground of sacred and precious imagery, from Byzantine icon painting to Gustav Klimt.
Hambleton had worked alongside Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring in the ferocious creative environment of New York's Lower East Side in the early 1980s, becoming notorious for the life-sized black Shadowman silhouettes he painted covertly on alleyways, street corners, and walls across lower Manhattan overnight. Where the full-body Shadowman haunted the street as a spectral presence, the Shadow Head series - developed as Hambleton transitioned from public walls to the studio - concentrated that same psychological intensity into the face alone: a compressed confrontation between the viewer and an image that refuses to resolve into comfort or familiarity.
The introduction of metallic gold into the Shadow Head works represents one of the most significant evolutions in Hambleton's late practice. The gold ground does not soften the gestural black silhouettes - if anything, it intensifies them, throwing the explosive brushwork and characteristic paint splatter into sharp relief against a surface associated with value, permanence, and transcendence. The contrast is deliberate and knowing: street art's most primal mark-making placed against one of art history's most elevated materials. The result is a work of exceptional formal tension and considerable beauty.
The diptych format - two heads presented together - adds a further dimension of psychological complexity. The doubling of the motif creates a dialogue between the two silhouettes, a sense of confrontation or communion that transforms the individual psychological event of a single Shadow Head into something closer to a narrative. It is among the rarest configurations in Hambleton's Shadow Head canon.
Hambleton was dramatically rediscovered from 2009 onwards, with a series of major international exhibitions - including a celebrated collaboration with Giorgio Armani - and a surge in auction prices that has accelerated significantly following his death in October 2017. His works are held in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Brooklyn Museum; and the Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh.
Double Shadow Head, Gold is a primary document of Hambleton's late practice at its most resolved and ambitious - a work of exceptional rarity, historical weight, and enduring investment-grade significance within the street art canon.
Literature
Jacoby, O. Shadowman. Red Splat Productions, 2017. [Feature documentary, Tribeca Film Festival premiere, 2017] Richard Hambleton: Shadowman. Exhibition catalogue. Leake Street Arches / Maddox Gallery, London, 13-15 September 2018.- X
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