Pop Art Words
Pop Art bridged the gap between the worlds of fine art and mass media or commercial fine art, the emergence of pop art words equally a spin off from Roy Lichtenstein's first forays into comic strip inspired pop art images is somewhat of a strange 1.
In many ways Lichtenstein'southward images were a parody of the comic book style and he accomplished this past exaggerating the traditional comic volume techniques and structures in a very deliberate mode.
Comics were not the only thing that was used as an inspiration for pop art, all of popular culture was drawn from including large corporate brands, logos and diverse characters from the world of cartoons and television.
His other famous comic inspired works include Crying Daughter Pop Art and Drowning Girl.
Pop Art Words
The well-nigh famous of all pop fine art words produced is "Whaam!" painted in 1963 by popular art artist Roy Lichtenstein.
Information technology is a rather large diptych(ii panels) painting measuring 68 past 160 inches and is based on a panel that appeared in the "Star Jockey" story from issue #89 of 'All-american Men of War' that was published by DC comics in 1962 see below:
Lichtenstein's version omitted one of the speech bubbles, inverse the colors, and exaggerated the lines of the original.
On the left console a P51 airplane pilot fires a missile at an on coming enemy plane and the speech bubble contains the post-obit: 'I PRESSED THE Burn Command… AND AHEAD OF ME ROCKETS BLAZED THROUGH THE SKY…'.
While on the right panel we see the exploding enemy with the signature 'Whaam!' in large, bold yellow.
The use of split up panels splits apart the action and the consequences of the activity, Lichtenstein would afterward joke that: "Of class there is the humorous connectedness of one panel shooting the other."
This exaggerated 'whaam' has since spanned thousands of copycat images and is now a very popular art lesson for school children in their early art instruction.
The words chooses are usually onomatopoeia words as in the globe is spelt in a way that imitates the sound in which information technology makes.
In an age of digital imaging and cartoon software creating these kinds of images is available to almost anyone at the click of a button.
For Lichtenstein yet the procedure to create these pop art images and pop art words was much more complex and time consuming equally he would employ several layer of paint to build the prototype upwards gradually over time
Source: https://www.artst.org/pop-art-words/
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