Roy Lichtenstein
American
1923, New York, New York
1997, New York, New York
Although trained as an abstract painter, Roy Lichtenstein became a pioneer of Pop art famed for paintings based on generic romance books and war comics. Lichtenstein transferred the clichéd comic-book compositions to canvas with a projector and simplified them; the resulting paintings mimic the impersonal appearance of cheap four-color printing, despite being meticulously handmade. Characteristic of this work are the enlarged benday dots that would become Lichtenstein's signature mark.
Lichtenstein abandoned working on comics paintings by the mid-1960s, but he retained a lifelong interest in the mass media. His later work often addressed how an artwork's meaning changed when it was reproduced and distributed as a commercial image.
Audio Stories
The artist on how comics inspired his paintings
transcripts
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Works in the Collection
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Roy LichtensteinBlonde1978 -
Roy LichtensteinFigures with Rope1978 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections on The Scream1990 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections on Girl1990 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections on Minerva1990 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections on Hair1990 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections on Conversation1990 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections on Crash1990 -
Roy LichtensteinGlass II1976 -
Roy LichtensteinTire1962 -
Roy LichtensteinReflections: Whaaam!1990 -
Roy LichtensteinLive Ammo (Tzing!)1962 -
Roy LichtensteinPortable Radio1962 -
Roy LichtensteinPeace Through Chemistry II1970 -
Roy LichtensteinLandscapes series1985 -
Roy LichtensteinInterior with Chair1997 -
Roy LichtensteinFigures with Sunset1978 -
Roy LichtensteinMirror I1976 -
Roy LichtensteinDrawing for Landscape1964 -
Roy LichtensteinStudy of Hands1981
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