Roy Lichtenstein (1923-1997), American painter, sculptor,
and printmaker, startled the art world in 1962 by exhibiting paintings
based on comic-book cartoons. Roy Lichtenstein
was born in New York City in 1923. He attended school there, and in
1939 studied with Reginald Marsh at the Art Students League. The
following year he entered Ohio State University. However, in 1943 his
education was interrupted; he served in the U.S. Army for three years.
He received his bachelor of fine arts degree from Ohio State University
in 1946 and a master of fine arts in 1949. He taught at Ohio State until
1951, then went to Cleveland to work. In 1957 he started teaching at
Oswego State College in New York; in 1960 he moved to Rutgers
University. Three years later he gave up teaching to paint full time. From
1951 to about 1957 Lichtenstein's paintings interpret themes of the
American West - cowboys, Indians, and the like - in a style broadly
imitative of modern European painters. Next, he began hiding images of
comic strip figures (Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Bugs Bunny) in his
paintings. By 1961 he had evolved the imagery for which he became known.
Broadly, he uses four types of images. The first three are
advertisement illustrations - commonplace
objects such as string, golf balls, kitchen curtains, slices of pie, or
a hot dog. He also used ommercialized variants of other artists' works,
such as Woman with Flowered Hat (1963), based on a coarse,
supermarket reproduction of a Picasso, and adaptations of paintings by
Piet Mondrian, of Gilbert Stuart's portrait of George Washington, and of
Claude Monet's haystacks and cathedral facades. The fourth type
of Lichtenstein imagery appears in paintings based on comic strips, with
their themes of passion, romance, science fiction, violence, and war.
In these, Lichtenstein employs the techniques of commercial art:
projectors magnify and spray-gun stencils create dots to make the
pictures look like newspaper cartoons seen through a magnifying glass. Lichtenstein's art is irreverent, at times antiseptic, yet the impact is usually brutal. He is fascinated with converting the banal
into art and debasing fine art through commercialization. In the late
1960s he turned to design elements found in Art-Deco and the commercial
art of the 1930s, as if to explore pop art's forerunners. In 1966 his
work was included in the Venice Biennale. In 1969 New York's Guggenheim Museum gave him a large retrospective exhibition. The
1970s saw Lichtenstein continuing to experiment with new styles. His
"mirror" paintings consist of spherical canvases with areas of color and
dots. One of these, Self-Portrait (1978), follows Magritte in its playful
placement of a mirror where a human head should be. During this decade,
Lichtenstein also created a series of still lifes in different styles. In
the 1980s and 1990s, Lichtenstein began to mix and match styles, often
augmenting his cartoony images with ideas derived from abstract expressionism.
Often his works relied on optical tricks or illusions, drawing his
viewers into a debate over the nature of "reality." Always the works
were marked by Lichtenstein's trademark sense of humor and the absurd. Lichtenstein's longevity
and prolific output brought him appreciation as one of America's
greatest living artists. His reputation as a gray eminence was
solidified by his 1994 commission to design a painting to adorn
the hull of the United State's entry in the America's Cup yacht race. A
series of maritime-themed works followed. In 1995, the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art launched a traveling exhibition, "The Prints of Roy
Lichtenstein," which covered more than two decades of his work in this
medium. 1996 marked a major departure for Lichtenstein. In an
exhibition at New York's Leo Castelli gallery, he unveiled a series of
paintings, "Landscapes in the Chinese Style," which eschewed irony in favor of delicate, wispy "impressions" of traditional Chinese landscape paintings. The series was praised for its subtlety and restraint,
as recognizable Lichtenstein techniques - the use of modulated dots to
represent mass for example - were used to support the compositions
rather than to declare an individual style. Lichtenstein died on Sept.
29, 1997, at the age of 73. |