(anonymous)Born October 27, 1923Manhattan, New York, U.S.
Died September 29, 1997 (aged 73)Manhattan, New York,
U.S.
Nationality American
Movement Pop Art
Roy Lichtenstein (October 27, 1923 – September 29, 1997) was a
prominent American pop artist. During the 1960s his paintings were
exhibited at the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York City and along
with Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, James Rosenquist and others he
became a leading figure in the new art movement. His work defined
the basic premise of pop art better than any other through parody.
[2] Favoring the old-fashioned comic strip as subject matter,
Lichtenstein produced hard-edged, precise compositions that
documented while it parodied often in a tongue-in-cheek humorous
manner. His work was heavily influenced by both popular advertising
and the comic book style. He himself described Pop Art as, "not
'American' painting but actually industrial painting".[3]
Early years Roy Lichtenstein was born in Manhattan into an
upper-middle-class New York City[1] family and attended public
school until the age of 12. He then enrolled at Manhattan's
Franklin School for Boys, remaining there for his secondary
education.[1] Art was not included in the school's curriculum;
Lichtenstein first became interested in art and design as a
hobby.[4] He was an avid jazz fan, often attending concerts at the
Apollo Theater in Harlem.[4] He frequently drew portraits of the
musicians playing their instruments.[4] After graduation from
Franklin, Lichtenstein enrolled in summer classes at the Art
Students League of New York, where he worked under the tutelage of
Reginald Marsh.[3]
Lichtenstein then left New York to study at the Ohio State
University, which offered studio courses and a degree in fine
arts.[1] His studies were interrupted by a three-year stint in the
army during and after World War II between 1943 and 1946.[1]
Lichtenstein returned home to visit his dying father and was
discharged from the army under the G.I. Bill.[4] He returned to
studies in Ohio under the supervision of one of his teachers, Hoyt
L. Sherman, who 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).[5]
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 1949 Lichtenstein received
Roy Lichtenstein 2
a M.F.A. degree from the Ohio State University and in the same year
married Isabel Wilson who was previously married to Ohio artist
Michael Sarisky (Isabel divorced Roy Lichtenstein in 1965).[6] In
1951 Lichtenstein had his first one-man exhibition at the Carlebach
Gallery in New York.[1] [7]
He moved to Cleveland in the same year, where he remained for six
years, although he frequently traveled back to New York. During
this time he undertook jobs as varied as a draftsman to a window
decorator in between periods of painting.[1] His work at this time
fluctuated between Cubism and Expressionism.[4] In 1954 his first
son, David Hoyt Lichtenstein, now a songwriter, was born. He then
had his second son, Mitchell Lichtenstein in 1956.[3] In 1957 he
moved back to upstate New York and began teaching again.[3] It was
at this time that he adopted the Abstract Expressionism style, a
late convert to this style of painting.[4] From 1970 until his
death, Lichtenstein split his time between New York city and a
house near the beach in Southampton.[8]
Rise to fame
Drowning Girl (1963). On display at the Museum of Modern Art, New
York.
Lichtenstein began teaching in upstate New York at the State
University of New York at Oswego in 1958. However, the brutal
upstate winters were taking a toll on him and his wife.[9]
In 1960, he started teaching at Rutgers University where he was
heavily influenced by Allan Kaprow, who was also a teacher at the
University. This environment helped reignite his interest in
Proto-pop imagery.[1] In 1961 Lichtenstein began his first pop
paintings using cartoon images and techniques derived from the
appearance of commercial printing. This phase would continue to
1965, and included the use of advertising imagery suggesting
consumerism and homemaking.[4] His first work to feature the
large-scale use of hard-edged figures and Ben-Day dots was Look
Mickey (1961, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.).[6] This
piece came from a challenge from one of his sons, who pointed to a
Mickey Mouse comic book and said; "I bet you can't paint as good as
that, eh, Dad?"[10] In the same year he produced six other works
with recognizable characters from gum wrappers and cartoons.[11] In
1961 Leo Castelli started displaying Lichtenstein's work at his
gallery in New York. Lichtenstein had his first one-man show at the
Castelli gallery in 1962; the entire collection was bought by
influential collectors before the show even opened.[1] In September
1963 he took a leave of absence from his teaching position at
Douglass College at Rutgers.[12]
Fame
It was at this time, that Lichtenstein began to find fame not just
in America but worldwide. He moved back to New York to be at the
center of the art scene and resigned from Rutgers University in
1964 to concentrate on his painting.[4] Lichtenstein used oil and
Magna paint in his best known works, such as Drowning Girl (1963),
which was appropriated from the lead story in DC Comics' Secret
Hearts #83. (Drowning Girl now hangs in the Museum of Modern Art,
New
The Head (1992), Barcelona.
York.[4] ) Also featuring thick outlines, bold colors and Ben-Day
dots to represent certain colors, as if created by photographic
reproduction. Lichtenstein would say of his own work: Abstract
Expressionists "put things down on the canvas and responded to what
they had done, to the color positions and sizes. My style looks
completely different, but the nature of putting down lines pretty
much is the same; mine just don't come out looking calligraphic,
like Pollock's or Kline's."[13]
Rather than attempt to reproduce his subjects, his work tackled the
way mass media portrays them. Lichtenstein would never take himself
too seriously however: "I think my work is different from comic
strips- but I wouldn't call it transformation; I don't think that
whatever is meant by it is important to art".[3] When his work was
first released, many art critics of the time challenged its
originality. More often than not they were making no attempt to be
positive. Lichtenstein responded to such claims by offering
responses such as the following: "The closer my work is to the
original, the more threatening and critical the content. However,
my work is entirely transformed in that my purpose and perception
are entirely different. I think my paintings are critically
transformed, but it would be difficult to prove it by any rational
line of argument".[3]
Whaam! (1963). Magna on Canvas. On display at Tate Modern,
London.
His most famous image is arguably Whaam! (1963, Tate Modern,
London[14] ), one of the earliest known examples of pop art,
adapted a comic-book panel from a 1962 issue of DC Comics'
All-American Men of War.[15] The painting depicts a fighter
aircraft firing a rocket into an enemy plane, with a red-and-yellow
explosion. The cartoon style is heightened by the use of the
onomatopoeic 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 ft 7 in x 13 ft 4 in).[14]
Original comic book panel from All-American Men of War #89, 1962
(DC Comics)
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 occasionally incorporate comics into his work in
different ways in later decades.) These panels were originally
drawn by such comics artists as Jack Kirby and DC Comics artists
Russ Heath, Tony Abruzzo, Irv Novick, and Jerry Grandenetti, who
rarely received any credit. Jack Cowart, executive director of the
Lichtenstein Foundation, contests the notion that Lichtenstein was
a copyist, saying: "Roy's work was a wonderment of the graphic
formulae and the codification of sentiment that had been worked out
by others. The panels were changed in scale, color, treatment, and
in their implications. There is no exact copy."[16] However,
some[17] have been critical of Lichtenstein's use of
comic-book
Roy Lichtenstein 4
imagery, especially insofar as that use has been seen as
endorsement of a patronizing view of comic by the art
mainstream;[17] noted comics author Art Spiegelman commented that
"Lichtenstein did no more or less for comics than Andy Warhol did
for soup."[17]
In 1967, his first museum retrospective exhibition was held at the
Pasadena Art Museum in California. Also in this year, his first
solo exhibition in Europe was held at museums in Amsterdam, London,
Bern and Hannover.[6] He married his second wife, Dorothy Herzka in
1968.[6]
In the 1970s and 1980s, his style began to loosen and he expanded
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 Center, Minneapolis) which incorporates five other previous
works, fitted into the scene.[1]
In the late 1970s, this style was replaced with more surreal works
such as Pow Wow (1979, Ludwig Forum für Internationale Kunst,
Aachen). In 1977, he was commissioned by BMW to paint a Group 5
Racing Version of the BMW 320i for the third installment in the BMW
Art Car Project. 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, and over 300 prints, mostly
in screenprinting.[18]
In 1996 the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. became the
largest single repository of the artist's work when he donated 154
prints and 2 books. In total there are some 4,500 works thought to
be in circulation.[1]
He died of pneumonia in 1997[10] at New York University Medical
Center. He was survived by his second wife, Dorothy, and by his
sons, David and Mitchell, from his first marriage. The DreamWorks
Records logo was his last completed project.[1] "I'm not in the
business of doing anything like that (a corporate logo) and don't
intend to do it again," allows Lichtenstein. "But I know Mo Ostin
and David Geffen and it seemed interesting."[19]
Relevance Pop art continues to influence the 21st century.
Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol were used in U2's 1997, 1998 PopMart
Tour and in an exhibition in 2007 at the British National Portrait
Gallery. Among many other works of art destroyed in the World Trade
Center attacks on September 11, 2001, a painting from
Lichtenstein’s The Entablature Series was destroyed in the
subsequent fire.[20]
His work Crying Girl was one of the artworks brought to life in
Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian.
Posthumous sales His painting Torpedo...Los! 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.[6]
In 2005, In the Car was sold for a then record $16.2m (£10m). His
cartoon-style 1964 painting "Ohhh . . . Alright . . ." was sold at
a record $42.6m (£26.4m) at a sale at Christies in New York, [21]
on 11 November 2010. [22]
Roy Lichtenstein 5
Awards • 1995 National Medal of the Arts, Washington D.C. • 1995
Kyoto Prize, Inamori Foundation, Kyoto, Japan. • 1993 Amici de
Barcelona, from Mayor Pasqual Maragall, L’Alcalde de Barcelona. •
1991 Creative Arts Award in Painting, Brandeis University, Waltham,
Massachusetts. • 1989 American Academy in Rome, Rome, Italy. Artist
in residence. • 1979 American Academy of Arts and Letters, New
York. • 1977 Skowhegan Medal for Painting, Skowhegan School,
Skowhegan, Maine.
References [1] Clare Bell. "The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation -
Chronology" (http:/ / www. lichtensteinfoundation. org/ lfchron1.
htm). . Retrieved
2007-11-12. [2] Arnason, H., History of Modern Art: Painting,
Sculpture, Architecture, New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1968. [3]
Coplans, John (1972). Roy Lichtenstein. Interviews, p55, 30, 31.
[4] Hendrickson, Janis (1993). Lichtenstein. pp. 94. [5] The
Ohio State University. "Sculpture. Facilities" (http:/ / art. osu.
edu/ ?p=ds_facilities). . Retrieved 2007-11-12. [6] Alloway,
Lawrence (1983). Roy Lichtenstein. pp. 113. [7] Clare Bell.
"Roy Lichtenstein Exhibitions..... 1946-2009" (http:/ / www.
lichtensteinfoundation. org/ solexint. htm). . Retrieved
2009-12-08. [8] Julianelli, Jane (1997-02-02). "Actor Finds That
His Roles Walk on the Darker Side of Life" (http:/ / select.
nytimes. com/ gst/ abstract.
html?res=F10F10F93C590C718CDDAB0894DF494D81). New York Times. . [9]
Gayford, Martin (2004-02-25). "Whaam! Suddenly Roy was the darling
of the art world" (http:/ / www. telegraph. co. uk/ arts/
main.
jhtml?xml=/ arts/ 2004/ 02/ 25/ baroy23. xml). The Daily Telegraph
(London). . Retrieved 2007-11-12. [10] Lucie-Smith, Edward
(September 1, 1999). Lives of the Great 20th-Century Artists.
Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0500237397. [11] Lobel, Michael
(2002). Image Duplicator. pp. 33. [12] Joan M Marter, Off
limits: Rutgers University and the Avant-Garde 1957-1963, Rutgers
University Press, 1999, p37. ISBN 0-8135-2610-8 [13] Kimmelman,
Michael (1997-09-30). "Roy Lichtenstein, Pop Master, Dies at 73"
(http:/ / query. nytimes. com/ gst/ fullpage.
html?res=9B03E0DF103AF933A0575AC0A961958260& sec=&
spon=& pagewanted=3). New York Times. . Retrieved 2007-11-12.
[14] Lichtenstein, Roy. "Whaam!" (http:/ / www. tate. org. uk/
servlet/ ViewWork?workid=8782). Tate Collection. . Retrieved
2008-01-27. [15] Lichtenstein, Roy. "Whaam!" (http:/ / www.
image-duplicator. com/ main. php?decade=60& year=63&
work_id=137). Roy Lichtenstein
Foundation website. . Retrieved 2009-09-12. [16] Beam, Alex
(October 18, 2006). "Lichtenstein: creator or copycat?" (http:/ /
www. boston. com/ news/ globe/ living/ articles/ 2006/ 10/
18/
lichtenstein_creator_or_copycat/ ) (Web). Editorial. Boston.com. .
Retrieved 2007-07-16. [17] Sanderson, Peter. "Art Spiegelman Goes
to College" (http:/ / www. publishersweekly. com/ article/
406197-Spiegelman_Goes_to_College.
php). Publishers Weekly. . Retrieved 2010-03-26. [18] Corlett, Mary
Lee. The prints of Roy Lichtenstein, a catalogue raisonné,
1948-1997 2nd ed. (New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2002). [19] http:/
/ www. highbeam. com/ doc/ 1G1-18598870. html [20] Kelly Devine
Thomas (November 2001). "Aftershocks" (http:/ / www. artnews. com/
issues/ article. asp?art_id=1005). ARTnews. .
Retrieved 2008-09-13. [21] "Roy Lichtenstein painting fetches
$42.6m at auction" (http:/ / www. bbc. co. uk/ news/
entertainment-arts-11732551). BBC News. 11
November 2010. . Retrieved 2010-11-11. [22] Bloomberg Business
Week, Lichtenstein’s $43 Million Pouting Redhead Helps Revive
Market (http:/ / www. businessweek. com/ news/
2010-11-11/
lichtenstein-s-43-million-pouting-redhead-helps-revive-market.
html) Retrieved November 11, 2010
Further reading • Roy Lichtenstein by Janis Hendrickson - ISBN
3-8228-0281-6 • The Prints of Roy Lichtenstein: A Catalogue
Raisonné 1948-1997 by Mary L. Corlett - ISBN 1-55595-196-1 • Roy
Lichtenstein (Modern Masters Series, Vol. 1) by Lawrence Alloway -
ISBN 0-89659-331-2 • Roy Lichtenstein Interview with Chris Hunt
Image Entertainment video, 1991 • Roy Lichtenstein Interview with
Melvyn Bragg video • Off Limits: Rutgers University and the
Avant-Garde, 1957-1963 - Ed. Joan Marter - ISBN 0-8135-2609-4 • Roy
Lichtenstein's ABC's by Bob Adelman - ISBN 978-0-8212-2591-2 • Roy
Lichtenstein Drawings and Prints 1970 Chelsea House publishers,
introduction by Diane Waldman
External links • Roy Lichtenstein Foundation (http:/ / www.
lichtensteinfoundation. org/ ) • Roy Lichtenstein (http:/ / www.
moma. org/ collection/ artist. php?artist_id=3542) at the Museum of
Modern Art • Roy Lichtenstein Image Duplicator (http:/ / www.
image-duplicator. com/ main. php) • The Art Archive: Roy
Lichtenstein (http:/ / www. artchive. com/ artchive/ L/
lichtenstein. html) • Deconstructing Roy Lichtenstein (http:/ /
davidbarsalou. homestead. com/ LICHTENSTEINPROJECT. html)
(sources for Lichtenstein's comic-book paintings) • Inside Roy
Lichtenstein's Studio 1990-92 (http:/ / www. lensculture. com/
lambrecht. html) • Roy Lichtenstein (http:/ / www. findagrave. com/
cgi-bin/ fg. cgi?page=gr& GRid=8870256) at Find a Grave • Roy
Lichtenstein (http:/ / www. nytimes. com/ slideshow/ 2010/ 09/ 23/
arts/ design/ 20100924-lich.
html?ref=multimedia) - slideshow by The New York Times • 1977 BMW
320i with special paintjob by Roy Lichtenstein (http:/ / www.
usautoparts. net/ bmw/ artcars/
art_lichtenstein. htm) • Roy Lichtenstein's public artwork at Times
Square-42nd Street, commissioned by MTA Arts for Transit. (http:/
/
www. mta. info/ mta/ aft/ permanentart/ permart.
html?agency=NYCT& line=P& station=2& artist=1) • Roy
Lichtenstein: Pop Art's Most Popular; His Whimsical Paintings Once
Evoked the "Shock of the New"; Now
They Evoke Record Prices on the Auction Block (http:/ / www.
cbsnews. com/ stories/ 2011/ 01/ 30/ sunday/ main7298927.
shtml)
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