воскресенье, 19 мая 2013 г.

Pop Art.The most famous painters.

The most famous painters of Pop Art were- Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Billy Apple, Evelyne Axell, Roy Lichtenstein, Alex Katz, Richard Hamilton and many others.

Each of artists took daily objects which gained mass character in Pop Art. Andy Warhol - bank of soup and portraits of movie stars. Roy Lichtenstein- heroes of animated films and comics. Jasper Jones - flags, cards and beer bottles. Musician Robert Raushenberg the founder of the known monogram, didn't try to follow traditions in art and to glorify or immortalize the person, instead Raushenberg introduced such forbidden subjects, as homosexuality, but only in a comic key. Richard Gamilton used the image of magazines and newspapers. Robert Indiana - a love subject in Pop Arth.


1992 Ter-Oganian Campbells Andy Warhol



In the style of Andy Warhol



Lichtenstein's painting Torpedo...Los! (1963) sold at Christie's for $5.5 million in 1989, a record sum at the time, making him one of only three living artists to have attracted such huge sums. In 2005, In the Car was sold for a then record $16.2m (£10m).



Johns is best known for his painting Flag (1954–55), which he painted after having a dream of the American flag. His work is often described as a Neo-Dadaist, as opposed to pop art, even though his subject matter often includes images and objects from popular culture.




In the early fifties Robert Raushenberg passed through three stages of creation of pictorial works:
"White painting" — on a white background only black figures and some figurative symbols are represented.
"Black painting" — on a cloth scraps of the crumpled newspapers were pasted, and all this became covered with black enamel.
"Red painting" — abstract picturesque cloths in red tones partially with stickers from newspapers, rusty nails, photos, a twine, etc.






Indiana's best known image is the word love in upper-case letters, arranged in a square with a tilted letter O. The iconography first appeared in a series of poems originally written in 1958, in which Indiana stacked LO and VE on top of one another. Then in a painting with the words "Love is God". The red/green/blue image was then created for a Christmas card for the Museum of Modern Art in 1964. It was put on an eight-cent US Postal Service postage stamp in 1973, the first of their regular series of "love stamps." 

So, all of them were sure that:
"Pop art — popular, fleeting, witty, fast-forgotten, sexual, young." ( Richard Gamilton)
"Pop — is love as the priest recognizes everything … Pop is similar to a bomb burst. It is the American dream, optimistical, generous and naive." ( Robert Indiana)





Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий