¶ … Mull over the relationship between art and popular culture since 1950. Focus your discussion on 3 or 4 artists.
The world of art has seen two distinct trends in recent decades since the mid-20th century. On one hand, high art has become less central to most people's lives. Other, more visceral forms of popular media have claimed the attention of the public in the incarnations of photography, film, and television. There is no longer a reliance upon visual representations such as sketching and painting to commemorate historical and personal occasions. But as a result of this divide between popular and high culture and the increasing significance of pop culture, high art has begun to adopt many themes and even the visual style of many popular works to justify its existence. As pop culture becomes part of every person's framework of reference, the elements of pop art have been co-opted and reconfigured by many great artists.
This cross-pollination between high and popular culture began when the Abstract Expressionist Jackson 'Jack the Dripper' Pollock became famous as a result of a Life magazine article on his works. The Life 'action' shots showing Pollock in the act of painting made a formerly obscure style of art that looked to the untrained eye like splatter paintings more meaningful. Life was a photojournalist magazine but it had the power to make a 'traditional' art form (painting) accessible and relevant in a popular fashion. "As the single most recognizable practitioner of Abstract Expressionism -- the movement that put America and, specifically, post-World War II New York at the epicenter of painting's avant-garde -- Pollock was a genuine art star" ("Jackson Pollock," Time). Pollock's star soon fell as he drifted into depression and drugs but the Life magazine article set the tone for how art and the popular press would enter into dialogue in the 20th century. High art could no longer afford to ignore popular art, given its ubiquity.
The next major movement in America after Pollock was Pop Art, a deliberate reaction to the obscurity of Abstract Expressionism. Pop Art, in contrast to the abstraction popular during the early 20th century, had a very literal appearance, drawing from the stylistic vocabulary of advertising, cartoons, and other popular media. It superficially looked 'like something' in a simplistic and representational fashion although arguably critiqued and ironized what it portrayed despite its shallow surface. "It could be argued that the Abstract Expressionists searched for trauma in the soul, while Pop artists searched for traces of the same trauma in the mediated world of advertising, cartoons, and popular imagery at large" ("Pop Art," The Art Story). Pop Art collapsed the division between high and popular art to such a degree it was often difficult to distinguish what was high and what was popular, when the inspiration and the art were paired side-by-side. Andy Warhol's famous silk-screened Campbell's soup cans, for example, were deliberately designed to look somewhat rough and amateurish, just like an advertisement for the product, versus a more perfect vision of the infamous red-and-white graphic.
There was also a difference in the attitude as well as the aesthetic of Pop Art. Pop Art overall had a more playful texture than Abstract Expressionism. Pop Art's representational rather than abstract and obscure style had observational, intellectual self-referential quality vs. The sense that it was opening up a window onto the artist's individual soul in a Romantic sense. "Although Pop art encompasses a wide variety of work with very different attitudes and postures, much of it is somewhat emotionally removed. In contrast to the 'hot' expression of the gestural abstraction that preceded it, Pop art is generally 'coolly' ambivalent. Whether this suggests an acceptance of the popular world or a shocked withdrawal, has been the subject of much debate" ("Pop Art," The Art Story). There was little of the actual artist in the work; again, much like in Andy Warhol's famous studies of Campbell's soup cans, the focus was on creating a dispassionate tone that drained the image of any potential invested higher meaning: the repetition of the cans and their sameness suggested there was no meaning, emotion, or individuality in the face of such 'branding' of experience.
An excellent example of this transposition of popular art into high art can also be seen in the works of Roy Lichtenstein. Lichtenstein made use of a technique that deliberately gave his paintings the texture of the popular, pulpy sensational magazines and cartoons of his era. "Lichtenstein's emphasis on methods of mechanical reproduction -- particularly through his signature use of Ben-Day dots -- highlighted...
Like many of the Pop Artists, Hockney frequently experimented with the media of his work, delving into both photography and film, and even set design. Photography, film, and other new media have proved to be a 'natural' outlet for Pop Artists. Since Pop Art cannibalizes the subject matter of popular culture, using the other tools of popular culture such as reproduction and the moving image seems like a natural progression.
Art History Roy Lichtenstein -- Stepping Out is a painting done in oil and magna on canvas by Roy Lichtenstein. (Magna is a plastic painting product made of permanent pigment ground in acrylic resen with solvents and plasticizer. This material mixes with turpentine and mineral spirits and dries rapidly with a mat finish) (www.artlex.com/ArtLex/M.html).Painted in 1978, this work is 85 inches in heighth and 70 inches in width, 218.4 cm by
Art Great Art proponents Art is not something new that started recently. Art work has been in existence for a very long time and there are various artists who have brought an influence in this field. When looking at art in the 1960s we can see that there are various art movements as well as cultural histories which are associated with this period. Andy Warhol was a very influential pop artist in the
All of these examples show that there is no linear narrative of art, rather the construction of even so-called periods between different nations and periods lies in the mind of the beholding academic, not in some universal truth of what is art's history. Critics also have their own abysses, and their own sands of what seems familiar and unfamiliar. Even art periodization is subjective as art, it is not
Saddling them with the idea that every work must have some kind of recognizable theory that speaks to the viewers may be too much for some artists to manage, and it could shut down their creative process. As another critic notes, "[I]n Western culture, after all, art is associated with the free expression of a unique vision or the pleasurable cultivation of individual tastes" (Williams 2004, p. 3). Thus,
The rococo was aimed towards the French court and nobles. The main message was not a religious one, but aimed the upper classes and focused on their lives, houses and celebrations. In France this style gave way to the austere neoclassic style at the end of the xviii century and disappeared with the French revolution in 1978, suddenly and completely. Neoclassicism appeared as a return to the classical ideology in
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