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Pop Art

Pop Art. Line, Shape, color, and pattern. What is Pop Art?. Pop Art appreciates popular culture, or what we also call “material culture.” It does not critique the consequences of materialism and consumerism; it simply recognizes its pervasive presence as a natural fact. Pop Art the Movement.

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Pop Art

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  1. Pop Art Line, Shape, color, and pattern

  2. What is Pop Art? • Pop Art appreciates popular culture, or what we also call “material culture.” It does not critique the consequences of materialism and consumerism; it simply recognizes its pervasive presence as a natural fact.

  3. Pop Art the Movement • Pop Art was originally a U.S. and British art movement in the 1950s and 60s • Artists in Great Britain began including American pop figures in their works as a sort of tribute to the relatively new nation’s growing economy and post-war optimism. American artists moved in a decidedly different direction, taking a more critical look at their own culture.

  4. How is Pop Art Characterized? • Attention on familiar images/objects of pop culture • Interest in mass media, advertising, comics and consumer products

  5. How is Pop Art Characterized? • Emphasizes flatness and frontal presentation, bright and bold colors (red, blue, and yellow). • They use mechanical and other deliberately inexpressive techniques that imply the removal of the artist's hand and suggest the depersonalized processes of mass production.

  6. How is Pop Art Characterized? • Themes and techniques drawn from popular mass culture • Advertisements • Comic books • Celebrity images • Mundane Cultural objects

  7. Andy Warhol Commercial artist who became known for his silkscreens of celebrities and everyday objects.

  8. Andy Warhol • Andy Warhol work continues to sell for millions every year. His obsession with celebrity and mass production has influenced many of the most successful contemporary artists. But his legacy reaches far beyond the art world. The Warhol brand is instantly recognizable, widely reproduced, and at home in both high art and popular culture.

  9. What is branding? • One of the best definitions of brand I’ve seen from the Tronvig Group. To them, a brand is what sticks in your mind associated with a product, service, or organization – whether or not , at that particular moment, you bought or did not buy.

  10. Andy Warhol Andy Warhol Campbell’s Soup Can (32), 1962

  11. Andy Warhol

  12. Andy Warhol Andy Warhol Green Marilyn, 1962.

  13. Roy Lichtenstein Created art with a Comic Book style Colors are basic, black-outlined Skin colors created with BEN-DAY DOTS…

  14. What are Ben-Day Dots? • Ben-Day dots are always of equal size and distribution in a specific area. Back in the day, pulp comic books used Benday Dots in primary colors to inexpensively create the secondary colors such as flesh tone.

  15. Roy Lichtenstein Roy Lichtenstein M-Maybe, 1965.

  16. How did he create the “Dots?” • At first, Roy dipped a plastic bristled dog-grooming brush into the paint to make the dots. Later, he used metal stencils, then paper stencils, for painting his Ben-Day dots. This new technique became Roy’s unique trademark style.

  17. Roy Lichtenstein Roy Lichtenstein Drowning Girl, 1963.

  18. Ads in the style of Pop Art (2013)

  19. Ads in the style of Pop Art (1990)

  20. Product Design in the style of Pop Art (2013 Target celebrating 50th Anniversary Warhol Campbell Soup)

  21. Ads in the style of Pop Art (2012)

  22. Ad and Product Design in the style of Pop Art (2009)

  23. Ads in the style of Pop Art (2009)

  24. Ads in the style of Pop Art

  25. Summary • Taking an everyday object and turning it into art is what the Pop Art movement was all about.

  26. Other Notable Pop Artists Billy Apple Sir Peter Blake Derek Boshier Patrick Caulfield Alan D’Arcangelo Jim Dine William Eggleston Erró Marisol Escobar Red Grooms Richard Hamilton Keith Haring David Hockney Robert Indiana Jasper Johns Allen Jones Alex Katz Nicholas Krushenick Yayoi Kusama Richard Lindner John McHale Peter Max Takashi Murakami Yoshitomo Nara Claes Oldenburg Julian Opie Eduardo Paolozzi Peter Phillips Sigmar Polke Hariton Pushwagner Mel Ramos Larry Rivers James Rosenquist • Ed Ruscha • George Segal • Colin Self • Aya Takano • Wayne Thiebaud • Andy Warhol • John Wesley • Tom Wesselmann

  27. The Assignment • Objective Using your own imagery, to create your own. • Three tools are dominant if you want to make Comic pictures: the Pen Tool, Noise Filter, and the Color Half Tone Filter.

  28. The Assignment • The requirements for Lichtenstein Inspired Piece: • One of your own images (CANNOT BE OFF OF THE INTERNET!!!) • Has at least ONE person In It • The Image has been cropped like a Lichtenstein (uncomfortably close) and NOT centered • Create line art of the person or persons in Black • Different widths and length in the lines

  29. The Assignment • Cont. requirements for Lichtenstein Inspired Piece: • Colored the all part of the line art • Benday dots (Red) are used for all areas that are skin • NO TEXT OR WORDS! • The background is one of the 2 techniques of Pop Art – Solid Color or Gradient

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