Jack Goldstein

(American, 1945–2003)

Jack Goldstein was a Canadian-born American artist known for his manipulation of appropriated imagery in several different media. Some of Goldstein’s acclaimed works include Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1975) and The Jump (1978), which are both visually striking and puzzling. “Dangerous objects are glamorous places to be,” he once quipped. Born on September 27, 1945 in Montreal, Canada, he moved with his family to Los Angeles in the 1960s. Goldstein went on to attend the Chouinard Art Institute, where he earned a BFA in 1969, and was part of the inaugural class of the California Institute of the Arts, where he studied under John Baldessari, receiving his MFA in 1972. He divided his time between Los Angeles and New York in the following decade, becoming part of what was known at the Pictures Generation alongside Robert Longo and Sherrie Levine. During the 1980s, Goldstein began producing photorealistic airbrush paintings of phenomena such as radar, lightning, and solar flares. The artist chose to isolate himself from the art world during the 1990s, and moved to a remote location in the California desert for much for the decade. Goldstein committed suicide on March 14, 2003 in San Bernardino, CA. Today, his works are held in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, and the Tate Modern in London, among others.

Jack Goldstein Artworks

Jack Goldstein (172 results)
Untitled, 1980

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1980

Sale Date: November 8, 1993

Auction Closed

UNTITLED, BLACK, 1982

Jack Goldstein

UNTITLED, BLACK, 1982

Sale Date: June 21, 1993

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1987

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1987

Sale Date: June 21, 1993

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1986

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1986

Sale Date: May 7, 1993

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1986

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1986

Sale Date: February 25, 1993

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1980

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1980

Sale Date: February 24, 1993

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1986

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1986

Sale Date: November 19, 1992

Auction Closed

Untitled

Jack Goldstein

Untitled

Sale Date: November 17, 1992

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1988

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1988

Sale Date: November 17, 1992

Auction Closed

UNTITLED (METEOR), 1983

Jack Goldstein

UNTITLED (METEOR), 1983

Sale Date: October 8, 1992

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1983

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1983

Sale Date: February 27, 1992

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1983

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1983

Sale Date: November 12, 1991

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1983

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1983

Sale Date: May 7, 1991

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1986

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1986

Sale Date: May 2, 1991

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1984

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1984

Sale Date: May 2, 1991

Auction Closed

Composition, 1987–1987

Jack Goldstein

Composition, 1987–1987

Sale Date: March 11, 1991

Auction Closed

Sans titre, 1987–1987

Jack Goldstein

Sans titre, 1987–1987

Sale Date: June 12, 1990

Auction Closed

Sans titre, 1988–1988

Jack Goldstein

Sans titre, 1988–1988

Sale Date: June 12, 1990

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1987–1987

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1987–1987

Sale Date: May 8, 1990

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1981–1981

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1981–1981

Sale Date: May 8, 1990

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1987–1987

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1987–1987

Sale Date: February 27, 1990

Auction Closed

Untitled

Jack Goldstein

Untitled

Sale Date: November 8, 1989

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1981–1981

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1981–1981

Sale Date: February 16, 1989

Auction Closed

Untitled, 1983–1983

Jack Goldstein

Untitled, 1983–1983

Sale Date: February 14, 1989

Auction Closed