Popular culture right side

19
Popular Culture right side

Transcript of Popular culture right side

Popular Cultureright side

Richard Hamilton

Just what is it that makes today’s homes so different,

so appealing?

1956Collage on paper

10-1⁄4 × 9-3⁄4”

Kunsthalle TübingenSammlung Zundel

[Fig. 19-01]

Peter Blake

On the Balcony

1955–57

Oil on canvas47-3⁄4 × 35-3⁄4”

Tate, London

[Fig. 19-03]

R. B. Kitaj

The Autumn of Central Paris (After Walter

Benjamin)

1972–73

Oil on canvas60 × 60”

Private collection[Fig. 19-04]

David Hockney

Robert Rauschenberg

Bed

1955

Combine painting: oil and pencil on pillow, quilt, and sheet on wooden supports

75-1⁄4 × 31-1⁄2 × 8”

The Museum of Modern ArtNew York

[Fig. 19-08]

Robert Rauschenberg

Reservoir1961

oil, wood, graphite,fabric,

metal, rubber on canvas

85” ½ x 62” ½

Smithsonian American Art museum

Jasper Johns

Flag

1954–55 (dated 1954 on

reverse)

Encaustic oil and collage on fabric

mounted on plywood42-1⁄4 × 60-5⁄8”

Museum of Modern Art New York

[Fig. 19-11]

Cy Twombly

Untitled1969

Crayon and oil on canvas

6’ 6” × 8’ 7”

Whitney Museum of

American Art New York

[Fig. 19-16]

Allan Kaprow

Household

1964

A Happening featuring women licking

strawberry jam off a carpresented for Festival of Contemporary Arts at the city dump, Ithaca,

New York

[Fig. 19-17]

George Segal

The Diner

1964–66

Plaster, wood, chrome, laminated plastic, Masonite, fluorescent lamp, glass, and paper

8’ 6” × 9’ × 7’ 3” Walker Art Center,

Minneapolis

Claes Oldenburg seated in The

Store

107 East 2nd Street, New

York, December 1961

Collection the artist

[Fig. 19-22]

Claes Oldenburg

Proposed Colossal Monument for Park Avenue

New York: Good Humor bar

1965

Crayon and watercolor on paper23-1⁄2 × 17-1⁄2”

Collection of Carroll Janis New York

[Fig. 19-25]

Jim Dine

Double Isometric Self-Portrait

(Serape)

1964

Oil with metal rings and hanging chains on canvas

4’ 8-7⁄8” × 7’ 1⁄2”

Whitney Museum of American Art,

New York

[Fig. 19-27]

Roy Lichtenstein Whaam! 1963Oil and Magna on two canvas panels 5’ 8” × 13’ 4” Tate, London

[Fig. 19-35]

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol

Marilyn Monroe

1962

Silkscreen ink on synthetic oil, acrylic, and silkscreen enamel on

canvas

20 × 16”

[Fig. 19-40]

James Rosenquist Portion of F-111 1965

Oil on canvas with aluminum

overall 10 × 86’

Private collection [Fig. 19-42]

Wayne Thiebaud

Pie Counter

1963

Oil on canvas

30 × 36”

Whitney Museum of American Art

New York [Fig. 19-49]