Three Offset Lithographs by Roy Lichtenstein
Three Offset Lithographs by Roy Lichtenstein
Three Offset Lithographs by Roy Lichtenstein
Three Offset Lithographs by Roy Lichtenstein
Three Offset Lithographs by Roy Lichtenstein
Three Offset Lithographs by Roy Lichtenstein

As I Opened Fire – Roy Lichtenstei

2500,00

As I Opened Fire – Roy Lichtenstein
Édition limitée sur 3000.
Gravures & estampes,
Lithographie sur Papier,
Dimensions 3x61cm H, 52cm L.
Parfait état.

Printed and copyright by the Stedelijk Museum of Amsterdam in 1964. « As I Opened Fire » three prints by Pop icon artist Roy Lichtenstein. The prints are made exclusively for the exhibition in Amsterdam at that time.

1 en stock

 

About Roy Lichtenstein (Designer)

Roy Lichtenstein is one of the principal figures of the American Pop art movement, along with Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist, Claes Oldenburg and Robert Rauschenberg. Drawing inspiration from comic strips, Lichtenstein appropriated techniques commercial printing in his paintings, introducing a vernacular sensibility to the visual landscape of contemporary art. He employed visual elements such as the halftone dots that comprise a printed image, and a comic-inspired use of primary colors gave his paintings their signature “Pop” palette. Born and raised in New York City, Lichtenstein enjoyed Manhattan’s myriad cultural offerings and comic books in equal measure. He began painting seriously as a teenager, studying watercolor painting at the Parsons School of Design in the late 1930s, and later at the Art Students League, where he worked with American realist painter Reginald Marsh. He began his undergraduate education at Ohio State University in 1940, and after a three year-stint in the United States Army during World War II, he completed his bachelor’s degree and then his master’s in fine arts. The roots of Lichtenstein’s interest in the convergence of high art and popular culture are evident even in his early years in Cleveland, where in the late 1940s, he taught at Ohio State, designed window displays for a department store and painted his own pieces. Working at the height of the Abstract Expressionist movement in the 1950s.
UGS : 73532-3 Catégories : , Étiquette :
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