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Roy Lichtenstein
Pop Art Pictures
Roy
Lichtenstein Prints
Drowning
Girl
Live
Ammo (Blang!), 1962
Cold
Shoulder, 1963
The
Red Horseman. Roy Lichtenstein (1974)
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Gift of Philip Morris Incorporated
1966.29.15
Girl
with Tear III
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Roy
Lichtenstein
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ROY LICHTENSTEIN'S YOUTH
Roy Lichtenstein (American, 1923-1997)
Born into a middle class family on October 27, 1923 in New York City,
Roy Lichtenstein attended public school until the age of 12, before
being enrolled into a private academy for his secondary education. The
academy did not have an art department, and he became interested in art
and design as hobby outside of his schooling. He was an avid fan of
Jazz and often attended concerts at the Apollo Theater in Harlem. He
would often draw portraits of the musicians at their instruments.
During 1939, in his final year at the academy, he enrolled in summer
art classes at the Arts Students League in New York under the tutelage
of Reginald Marsh.
Roy Lichtenstein Pop Art Fine
Art Wallpapers
On graduating in 1940, Lichtenstein left New York to study at the Ohio
State University which offered studio courses and a degree in fine
arts. His studies were interrupted by a three year stint in the army
during World War II. He returned to his studies in Ohio after the war
and one of his teachers at the time, Hoyt L. Sherman, is widely
regarded to have had a significant impact on his future work
(Lichtenstein would later name a new studio he funded at OSU as the
Hoyt L. Sherman Studio Art Center). Lichtenstein entered the graduate
program at Ohio State and was hired as an art instructor, a post he
held on and off for the next ten years. In 1951 he had his first
one-man exhibition at a gallery in New York, the exhibition was a minor
success. He moved to Cleveland in 1951, where he remained for six
years, doing jobs as various as draftsmen to window decorator in
between periods of painting. His work at this time was based on cubist
interpretations of other artist’s paintings such as Frederic Remington.
In 1957 he moved back to upstate New York and began teaching again. It
is at this time that he adopted the Abstract Expressionism style, a
late convert to this style of painting; he showed his work in 1959 to
an unenthusiastic audience.
ROY LICHTENSTEIN AS AN ARTIST
He began teaching at Rutgers University in 1960 where he was heavily
influenced by Allan Kaprow, also a tutor at the University. His first
work to feature the large scale use of hard edged figures and Benday
Dots was Look Mickey (1961, National Gallery, Washington DC). In the
same year he produced six other works with recognizable characters from
gum wrappers or cartoons. In 1961 Leo Castelli started displaying
Lichtensteins work at his gallery in New York, and he had his first one
man show at the gallery in 1962, the entire collection was bought by
influential collectors of the time before the show even opened. Finally
making enough money to live from his painting, he stopped teaching in
the same year.
Using oil and Magna paint his best known works, such as Drowning Girl
(1963, Museum of Modern Art, New York), feature thick outlines, bold
colors and Benday Dots to represent certain colors, as if created by
photographic reproduction. Rather than attempt to reproduce his
subjects, his work tackles the way mass media portrays them.
His most famous image is arguably Whaam! (1963, Tate Gallery, London),
one of the earliest known examples of pop art, featuring a fighter
aircraft firing a rocket into an enemy plane with a dazzling red and
yellow explosion. The cartoon style is heightened by the use of the
onomatopoetic lettering WHAAM! and the boxed caption "I pressed the
fire control... and ahead of me rockets blazed through the sky..." This
diptych is large in scale, measuring 1.7 x 4.0 m (5'7" x 13'4").
Most of his best-known artworks are relatively close, but not exact,
copies of comic book panels, a subject he largely abandoned in 1965.
(He would occassionally incorporate comics into his work in different
ways in later decades.) These panels were originally drawn by lesser
known comic book artists such as Russ Heath, Tony Abruzzo, Irv Novick,
and Jerry Grandinetti, who rarely received any credit. Artist Dave
Gibbons, said of Lichtenstein's works: "Roy Lichtenstein's copies of
the work of Irv Novick and Russ Heath are flat, uncomprehending
tracings of quite sophisticated images." Lichtenstein's obituary in The
Economist noted that "this is to miss the point of Roy Lichtenstein's
achievement. His was the idea. The art of today, he told an
interviewer, is all around us."
During the seventies and eighties, his work began to loosen and expand
on what he had done before. He produced a series of “Artists Studios”
which incorporated elements of his previous work. A notable example
being Artist's Studio, Look Mickey (1973, Walker Art Centre,
Minneapolis) which incorporates five other previous works, fitted into
the scene.
In the late seventies this style was replaced with more surreal works
such as Pow Wow (1979, Ludwig Forum für Internationale Kunst,Aachen).
In addition to paintings, he also made sculptures in metal and plastic
including some notable public sculptures such as Lamp in St. Mary’s,
Georgia in 1978.
His painting Torpedo...Los! sold at Christie's for $5.5 million in
1989, a record sum at the time, one of only three artists to have
attracted such huge sums for art produced within the artists lifetime.
In 1995 Lichtenstein was awarded the Kyoto Prize from the Inamori Foundation in Kyoto, Japan
In 1996 The National Gallery in Washington DC became the largest single
repository of the Artists work when he donated 154 prints and 2 books.
In total there are some 4,500 works thought to be in circulation.
Roy Lichtenstein
Born: New York, New York 1923
Died: New York, New York 1997
ROY LICHTENSTEIN'S DEATH
He died of pneumonia on September 29, 1997 at New York University
Medical Center. Twice married, he was survived by his wife, Dorothy,
who he wed in 1968 and by his sons, David and Mitchell, from his first
marriage.
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