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Published on May 26th, 2012 | by tomkolovos

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Pop, Lock And Drop It: Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective” opens at The Art Institute of Chicago

Whaam! Bratatat! Varoom!

The Art Institute of Chicago explodes this summer (May 22–September 3, 2012) with the energy of Roy Lichtenstein in the largest exhibition of the influential Pop artist to date. More than 160 works—from the familiar to the completely unexpected, including never-before-seen drawings, paintings, and sculpture—present a profound exploration of Lichtenstein’s signature style and its myriad applications. The result—a dazzling array of color and dynamism, traversing art historical movements, magazine advertisements and comics, nudes and heroes, sea and sky—captures the power of Pop with works of art as fresh and revolutionary as they were 50 years ago.

Lichtenstein first made a splash with his groundbreaking brand of Pop Art in 1961 with Look Mickey and similar works that channeled the seemingly “artless” medium of cartoons. While playfully challenging the world of fine art, Lichtenstein’s use of comics and other mass media imagery also served as a vehicle for his lifelong exploration of the processes of painting and the question of “style.” His immediately recognizable signature—the hand-painted re-creations of benday “dots” derived from commercial printing—was critical to his act of blurring the boundaries between “low art” and traditional artistic genres. This technique also masked the effort and meticulous preparation—drawing, transposition, enlargement, and editing—he put into what can appear to be mechanically produced paintings.

Through his surprisingly fluid approach, Lichtenstein explored a broad variety of subjects, from the eminently art historical to the commercial, and this exhibition chronicles them all, bringing together most of his major series. From cartoon panels and treatments of brushstrokes through representations of mirrors and “Artist’s Studio” paintings and finally to the luminous Chinese landscapes that Lichtenstein was working on before his death in 1997, this retrospective showcases one of the most prolific and brilliant careers in 20th-century art.

Catalogue: A major catalogue accompanies the exhibition and features new scholarship by an international team of distinguished curators, critics, and art historians including James Rondeau, Frances and Thomas Dittmer Chair and Curator, Department of Contemporary Art, and Sheena Wagstaff, curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Organizer: The exhibition is organized by the Art Institute of Chicago and Tate Modern, London.

Other Venues: Roy Lichtenstein travels from Chicago to the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC (October 14–January 13, 2013); Tate Modern, London (February 21–May 27, 2013); and Centre Pompidou, Paris (July 3–November 4, 2013).

READ: Roy Lichtenstein: The Pre-Packaged Painter

“How the artist pioneered our clip-art world” by Blake Gopnik

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