Gerhard Richter – Cage (P19-3)


Gerhard Richter (German, b. 1932)

Cage P19-3, 2020

Medium: Diasec-mounted Giclée print on aluminium composite panel

Dimensions: 100 × 100 × 3 cm (39 2/5 × 39 2/5 × 1 in)

Edition of 200: Numbered, labelled and with publisher’s stamp, verso

Condition: Mint (shipped in original box)

This artwork ships worldwide — fully insured.
Gerhard Richter - Cage (P19-3)

About this artwork

Gerhard Richter – Cage (P19-3)

Gerhard Richter’s Cage P19-3 (2020) is part of a rare series of six limited edition prints (P19), derived from the artist's monumental Cage Paintings created in 2006. The series takes its name from the experimental composer John Cage, whose music Richter listened to while working on the original paintings, and whose ideas around chance, process, and the suppression of artistic ego profoundly informed the work.

Issued as a diasec-mounted giclée print on aluminium composite panel, Cage P19-3 translates the physical intensity of the large-scale paintings into a more intimate, square format. Layers of grey, blue, and green are scraped back and reworked, punctuated by subtle flashes of colour, producing a surface that oscillates between emergence and erasure. This process echoes Cage's notion of art as something continuously unfolding, "a song in the process of being sung," rather than a fixed expression.

Gerhard Richter's use of a squeegee instead of a traditional brush, and his decision to base the prints on photographs of the paintings, further distances the work from personal gesture. Printmaking becomes an extension of his long-standing pursuit of non-involvement, where mechanical reproduction and repetition reduce the imprint of the artist's hand. Despite this deliberate effacement of ego, this fine art print achieves a heightened sensorial presence, offering a luminous, meditative colour experience.

The philosophical and material concerns of the Cage prints are inseparable from the original Cage Paintings, which were presented at Gagosian Gallery in 2021 alongside a live recital by Patti Smith. Together, the paintings and prints articulate Richter's sustained inquiry into chance, perception, and autonomy, positioning Cage P19-3 as a key example of his late abstract practice that is both contemplative and visually dynamic.

Gerhard Richter - Zaun

About Gerhard Richter

Gerhard Richter, born in 1932 in Dresden, Germany, is widely regarded as one of the most important artists of the post-war period. Over a career spanning more than six decades, Richter has continuously challenged the boundaries of painting, moving fluidly between photorealism and abstraction while questioning the nature of images, memory, and perception.

Richter first gained recognition for his photo-based paintings, derived from found photographs and rendered with a characteristic blur that destabilizes the distinction between reality and representation. These works confront the reliability of photographic truth and reflect Richter's skepticism toward images as carriers of meaning. From the late 1970s onward, abstraction became central to his practice, culminating in his iconic abstract paintings created with a squeegee. In these works, layers of paint are dragged across the surface, producing compositions shaped by both chance and deliberate control.

Alongside his paintings, Gerhard Richter has maintained a sustained and highly significant print practice. His signed limited edition prints include lithographs, screenprints, digital prints, and photographic editions, often revisiting key motifs from his paintings while exploring the conceptual tension between originality and reproduction. Richter has repeatedly emphasized editions as a way to broaden access to his work, positioning fine art prints as autonomous artworks rather than secondary objects.

Across paintings, prints, artist's books, and multiples, Richter's oeuvre constitutes a rigorous investigation into image-making itself. His work continues to exert a profound influence on contemporary art, offering a critical reflection on history, perception, and the role of painting in the modern world.

Prints, Photographs & Multiples

View our full collection of

Prints, Photographs & Multiples

Shop now