Transcript Pop Art

Pop Art
(1958 – 1975)
Art history
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The Pop Art movement originated in England in the 1950s and traveled
overseas to the United States during the 1960s
The term Pop art was first used by English critic, Lawrence Alloway in
1958 in an edition of Architectural Digest.
He was describing all post-war work centered on consumerism and
materialism, and that rejected the psychological allusions of Abstract
Expressionism.
An attempt to bring art back into American daily life, it rejected abstract
painting because of its sophisticated and elite nature.
The most recognized Pop Artist, Andy Warhol, used a photo-realistic,
mass production printmaking technique called seriagraphy to produce his
commentaries on media, fame, and advertising.
FAMOUS POP ARTISTS
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Leading Pop artists include :
Andy Warhol
Robert Rauschenberg
Roy Lichtenstein
John Chamberlain
ANDY WARHOL
(1928-1987 )
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He was one of the most influential
American artists of the 20th century
Born in Pittsburgh, and he moved to
New York at the age of twenty-one to
become a commercial artist.
Warhol began making paintings of
familiar objects such as soup cans
and brillo pads.
His interest in popular culture
expanded as he began to depict
celebrities and newspaper clippings in
his prints.
Warhol also created films and worked
with the rock band, The Velvet
Underground.
Andy Warhol´s Art
ROBERT RAUSCHENGERG
(1925 - )
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After studying at the Kansas City Art
Institute and the Black Mountain
College in North Carolina, Robert
Rauscenberg moved to Paris in 1948
to train at the Academie Julien.
Early in his career, Rauschenberg
collaborated with composer John
Cage in a piece called Happenings.
He then evolved from collages to
paintings, working with a sole color,
normally black, white, or red.
This approach changed drastically in
the 1950’s when Rauschenberg began
to create controversial pictures that
used unusual colors and a range of
found junkyard objects.
Robert Rauschenberg´s Art
ROY LIECHTENSTEIN
(1923 – 1997)
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Born in New York, Roy Lichtenstein
studied at the Art Student’s League
and then the Ohio State University.
From 1943 to 1946, he taught at the
latter and then moved on to teach at
New York State and Rutgers
Universities.
In 1949, Lichtenstein began exhibited
his early work, which had strong
influences of both Cubism and
Abstract Expressionism.
After meeting Allan Kaprow at
Rutgers, he became interested in
consumerism and American culture
and spurred the development of the
Pop Art movement.
Roy Lichtenstein´s Art
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