VENICE.- The exhibition Helter Skelter: Arthur Jafa and Richard Prince, curated by Nancy Spector, will open to the public on Saturday, 9 May, at Fondazione Prada in Venice.
Helter Skelter, on view until 23 November 2026, reveals a creative conversation between the work of two prominent American artists, Arthur Jafa (b. 1960) and Richard Prince (b. 1949), that has never been examined before. Born a decade apart, they share an ethos of lawlessness when it comes to the appropriation and manipulation of images siphoned from movies, pulp novels, comic books, YouTube videos, sci-fi stories, album covers, record sleeves, rock n roll posters, first-edition Beat volumes, news reels, celebrity memorabilia, and social-media posts. Trafficking heavily in American popular culture, they expose its grit and grift, while embracing many of its myths and perversions. Both artists chart peculiar topographies specific to the United States: Jafas reflecting his identity as an African American man, coupled with a mission to invigorate Black cinema and art; Princes hovering between a self-conscious critique of white masculinity and a fascination with the underbelly of the American psyche.
The exhibition features more than fifty works, including photographs, videos, installations, sculptures, and paintings. It also showcases new work by each artist and a collaboratively conceived zine, which incorporates images exchanged between the artists during the process of making this exhibition
Helter Skelter unfolds across the ground and first floor of the Venetian palazzo through a series of thematic and conceptual juxtapositions, combining works by both artists to illuminate each of their practices and tease out shared subject matter and mutual obsessions. Underlying the elective affinities between their artistic projects, Helter Skelter reveals a certain vernacular edge in the U.S., where both artists live and work: A country forever tarnished by its history of slavery; a country defined by its remarkable musical traditions rooted in Black culture; a country of doing without, but making good; a country of spirit and prayer and freedom of expression; a country of protest and subcultures and humor and celebrity, according to Nancy Spector.
As clarified by Spector, Both artists have cited Marcel Duchamps readymade, a radical transposition of objects from the real world into an art context, as a source of inspiration or, at least, a reference point for their respective practices. In his shift from making (having initially produced paintings in a Cubist mode) to taking (placing a commercially fabricated, inverted urinal in an exhibition framework), Duchamp modeled a kind of artistic piracy that constitutes the very DNA of Jafas and Princes discrete but tantalizingly analogous methodologies. They are both image scavengers. Seeking no prior permission, they dip into the overflowing reservoir of visual culturefrom the swamps of social media to the annals of print journalism, from advertisings hall of mirrors to Hollywoods celluloid archiveto take whatever they want and convert it into art by choice alone. [
] What comes into focus through the refracting lens of Jafas and Princes appropriation-based practices is an unflinching exposé on America. They are quintessentially American artists in subject and medium, literally enfolding objects and images from the empirical world into their works, subsuming them as readymadesTrojan horses, as it were, designed to disrupt established belief systems.