Roy Lichtenstein’s Explosion (1967) typifies the artist’s revolutionary Pop style and comic book-inspired imagery. Lichtenstein began appropriating images of explosions from popular war comics in his ...
Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein’s work is instantly recognizable: the giant, colorful canvases; the Ben-Day dots; the distinctively comic book-inspired images. That last element has caused controversy ...
In the 1960s, when Roy Lichtenstein began incorporating comic strips into his paintings, he framed the gesture as a form of ironic appropriation. His use of cartoons and comics was meant to ...
An excellent example of Roy Lichtenstein's small, intimate studies made for his larger paintings, "Study for Wall Explosion I" (1965) presents a rare opportunity to acquire one of the artist's ...
One clue in the show is that just before he made the rag-painted abstractions, Lichtenstein made a series of drawings that combined free-flowing Abstract-Expressionist gestures with images of Bugs ...
When George Washington crossed the Delaware River to ambush enemy soldiers in the Battle of Trenton, nobody was on hand to portray his masterful tactical maneuver. The famous depiction hanging in the ...
Roy Lichtenstein once said: “I take a cliche and try to organize its forms to make it monumental. The difference is often not great, but it is crucial.” Lichtenstein defied traditional good taste and ...
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