Roy Lichtenstein: History in the Making, 1048-1960
By (Author) Elizabeth Finch
By (author) Marshall N. Price
Rizzoli International Publications
Rizzoli International Publications
8th September 2020
United States
General
Non Fiction
700.92
Hardback
224
Width 210mm, Height 292mm
Roy Lichtenstein: History in the Making, 1948-1960 is the first major museum exhibition to investigate the early work of one of the best known American artists of the twentieth century. Co-organised by the Colby College Museum of Art and the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, the exhibition will include approximately 80 works from the artist's fruitful and formative early career drawn from both public and private collections, many never before seen by the public. The show and accompanying catalogue will include paintings, drawings, sculptures and prints, which reveal an artist, even in the earliest stages of his career, with a keen interest in visual culture, culling with a critical eye from a wide range of sources, including fairy tales, folk and children's art, and mythic forms of Americana (from cowboys to Disney cartoon characters). These and other inspirations were the essential but little-known precursors to the artist's later sourcing of comic books and advertisements. Likewise, his exploration of abstraction, just before the artist's abrupt turn to Pop Art in 1961, straddles the line between unabashed lyricism and wry critique of second-generation Abstract Expressionism.
The catalogue which includes several essays offering new scholarship by leading experts in the field provides an opportunity to more fully assess the artistic and cultural dynamism of postwar America through the lens of one of the twentieth-century's great masters.
Elizabeth Finch is the Lunder Curator of American Art at the Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine. She has organised numerous exhibitions, including Terry Winters: Printed Matters, Sharon Lockhart: Lunch Break, Will Barnet: New York Drawings & Prints, Susan Hiller: The J. Street Project, and Andy Warhol: Screen Tests & Photographs.