Roy Fox Lichtenstein (October 27, 1923 – September 29, 1997) was one of the most prominent American pop artists. During the 1960s, along with Andy Warhol, J ...
One of my favorite art movements is Pop Art and I love it! I love the artists, I love what came out of it! As well, I think teaching art lessons that are inspired by the Pop Art Movement is a great way to engage the learners in your classroom. Let's look at 5 Pop Art Lesson ideas for Kids in your classroom!
Learn how to make this pop art inspired newspaper collage painting using just a few items including some acrylic paint colors of your choice. An upcycle project to give you wow-factor for your walls.
We had a lot fun studying real candy prices as our inspiration for our Pop Art Candy Paintings. Tempra paint and black Sharpie outlines adde...
Kids Learn about Andy Warhol and Pop Art by recreating his art using this fun and simple activity. Add to your child's knowledge of Art History in a fun way!
About The Artwork Square foot 12x12 inch mixed media collage and painting on canvas. Edges painted, ready to hang. Working in the square foot format liberates me to explore old fashioned cut and paste collage along while experimenting with as many other media as possible, including graphite, pastel, acrylic and spray paints, glitter glue, metallic leaf, chalk, pencil crayons, and more. I love words and images and collage is all about eclectic curiosity and the joy of juxtaposition. The unexpected narratives and suggested stories that appear are an act of chance, or of fate; each piece is an unplanned collision of memory, imagination, and fabrication. "A superhuman effort to coalesce the imaginative world." Moray Mair, Mutant Space Arts "Luzajic, like Wonder Woman, is her own institution." Paul Robinson, Blog Critics "Queen of the fantastic." Carrie Shibinsky, Art Bomb Daily Lorette says, "I am driven by eclectic curiosity, and by the joy of juxtaposition. My work is a curiosity cabinet and an apothecary of magic potions and spells. It is poetry, and a surreal dream. It is the frantic pace of the city and the magnificent silence of the night. It is about love and death and the sacred and inane, and the absurdity and beauty in all things." Compared to Rauschenberg, Schwitters, and Basquiat, and inspired by Warhol, Joseph Cornell, Robert Motherwell, and Antoni Tapies, Lorette C. Luzajic wears her influences on her sleeve. Appropriating relentlessly from art history, advertising, music, poetry, fiction, culture, religion, and travel, she plunders everything but creates work that is original and entirely her own. Lorette writes, "A collagist is always looking, always deconstructing and reconstructing. From dentist waiting room magazines to church hymnals to art history masterpieces at the museum to nightclub flyers, my mind is constantly snipping, juxtaposing, discovering, experimenting, replacing, gluing over, scraping back layers, recontextualizing." Lorette's use of materials reflects the same montage quality as the varied concepts that inspire her. She uses acrylic paint, gouache paint, watercolour, spray paint, ink, fabric paint, chalk pastel, oil stick, oil pastel, crayons, pencil crayons, graphite, found papers, found photographs, found images, house paint, plaster, silicone, pen, markers, cosmetics, glues, stickers, and any other media she can incorporate. Lorette studied for and received a Bachelor of Applied Arts degree in journalism, but went on to focus on creative work in visual art, photography, poetry, and writing about art. She is the editor of The Ekphrastic Review at www.ekphrastic.net, a journal dedicated exclusively to literature inspired by visual artwork. She has published hundreds of her own poems and stories in nearly 200 magazines, journals and blogs, as well as a dozen books of poetry or essays on art, life, and interesting people. She teaches workshops on ekphrastic writing and on art without drawing. Her visual art shows regularly at home in Toronto, Canada, including at the Spoke Club, the Gladstone Hotel, Artusiasm Gallery, the Flying Pony Gallery, the Ritz Carlton, the Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition, Scotiabank Contact Photography Festival, the Toronto Artist Project, Hashtag Gallery, Project Gallery, and more. She has also shown work further afield, including Brisbane, Bristol, Edinburgh, Los Angeles, San Diego, Chicago, New York, and more. She recently participated in an international artists symposium in Tunisia, working to create paintings for the Ministry of Culture and to show in two exhibitions in Tunis and Hammamet. She also visited Mexico recently for a duet exhibition at Le Cirque Galeria in Merida, Yucatan and a number of group shows at other venues. In March of 2018, Lorette took the top $5000 award for an art contest sponsored by E11even Restaurant and Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment. Her mixed media paintings have found homes all over the world, and hang in collections alongside originals by Miro, Erte, Dubuffet, Ellsworth Kelly, Jim Dine, Jane Ash Poitras, and Benjamin Chee Chee. www.mixedupmedia.ca View a short documentary about my work from Val Peter and Kyle Robinson at Artists Unknown: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbLL94Abd4k&t=39s Original Created: 2017 Subjects: Pop Culture/Celebrity Materials: Canvas Styles: Abstract Expressionism Fine Art Folk Pop Art Street Art Mediums: Acrylic Spray Paint Ink Collage Pastel Details & Dimensions Painting: Acrylic on Canvas Original: One-of-a-kind Artwork Size: 12 W x 12 H x 0.8 D in Frame: Not Framed Ready to Hang: Not applicable Packaging: Ships in a Box
A key figure in the Pop Art movement, Roy Lichtenstein stands out via his distinctive style and confronting works. Let's take a look at 10 of his greatest!
Tabby Kitty Cat Buck lounges on his Pop Art heart, coolly representing this listing for the the CUSTOM oil painting of YOUR pet in the 8x8" size. (I've been getting more requests for paintings with a Pop Art flair, and also enjoy creating a colorful Pop Art background, as seen in this listing...) ~~~~~~~~~~~~ To get started on YOUR custom painting, message me with some photos of the special pet (large and good resolution please) via Etsy or to me: puci [!at] puciart.com I create the pre-painting composition for your OK, then paint your pet's portrait. * turnaround time is about 5 weeks * You make payment after you've seen photos of the finished painting Painted on prepared fine cotton fabric stretched over a 3/4"-thick hardwood board & stapled in the back, your painting arrives to you ready to hang/display. Many more painting options: http://www.etsy.com/shop/puciPetPortraits Puci's wonderful customer's feedback: http://www.etsy.com/people/puci/feedback *a pet portrait can provide a life-time of happy memories of absent pets* ❤ puci
About The Artwork AudreyHepburn Acrylic paint on matboard paper 4 ply. Size is 32x40 inches. Paper is about 1/16 inch thick. Original Created: 2019 Subjects: Interiors Materials: Paper Styles: Pop Art Portraiture Modern Fine Art Mediums: Acrylic Details & Dimensions Painting: Acrylic on Paper Original: One-of-a-kind Artwork Size: 32 W x 40 H x 0.1 D in Frame: Not Framed Ready to Hang: Not applicable Packaging: Ships in a Box
Anything can happen in a world that holds such beauty - Christian Schloe is a talented Chilean artist whose work includes digital art, painting, illustration, and photography.
MY DIAMOND ART DIY 5D Full Drill “My Diamond Art” Painting Kit Diamond Art, also known as Diamond Painting or Paint with Diamonds is a new craft/hobby for crafters of all ages. Similar in many ways to cross-stitching and paint-by-numbers, Diamond Art is a relaxing and stress-reducing craft that helps improve focus and fine motor skills while creating a beautiful work of art. Diamond Art involves placing small cut rhinestones onto a DMC-coded adhesive canvas creating a beautiful mosaic painting. My Diamond Art has one of the largest diamond art portrait collections available to ship worldwide from the USA. Collections varying from animals, cars, and architecture to religious, pop culture, and the abstract with new art weekly. PRODUCT INFORMATION Material - Poly-Cotton Canvas Full Drill Square Acrylic Rhinestones (amount varies based on the size) Canvas Size: 30cm x 40cm **(Completed picture will be 2.5 cm smaller than canvas for framing)** 40cm x 50cm 50cm x 60cm 60cm x 70cm 70cm x 80cm 80cm x 90cm 90cm x 100cm 100cm x 110cm **FRAME NOT INCLUDED** Included in My Diamond Art kit: 1) 1 Poly-Cotton Canvas 2) Diamond Drills (Amount varies based on size) 3) 1 Diamond Pen 4) 1 Pair Tweezers 5) 1 Diamond Tray 6) Wax 7) User Instructions
See images from one notable show every weekday.
Is there anything better than a perfect stack of pancakes with a giant pat of butter, on a lazy Sunday morning? No, there isn't - and this stack is just waiting to adorn and inspire your kitchen space, office or anywhere else that is craving some food art. A great gift for anyone: friends, family, and co-workers alike. Pancake art makes people happy, and that's what we're all about.
The purpose of this lesson is to teach students about Pop Art - but also about copyright and rights of publicity. Students will find a photograph of a celebrity they admire. They will write a letter to the copyright holder asking permission to make a painting from the photograph (a derived work of art).
Much like his fellow Pop pioneer Andy Warhol, who spent his first decade in New York working as a commercial illustrator, the artist James Rosenquist was able to so acutely capture American pop culture thanks to his own un-bohemian beginnings: He started out painting billboards atop the skyscrapers in Times Square, a day job whose bright, bold colors eventually bled into the abstract paintings he devoted himself to after work. Almost equally oversized, thanks to an abundance of panels—his 86-foot, anti-war masterpiece F-111 was made up of no less than 51—his canvases soon began to feature not just Rosenquist's abstractions, but faces like Marilyn Monroe and John F. Kennedy, and motifs like cars, dishware, and groceries. All that made for a distinctive style that helped to shape Pop art in the '60s, alongside his contemporaries Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein (even winning the approval of the staunchest minimalists, like Donald Judd). In remembrance of the artist, who died on Friday at age 83, take a look back at his work from over the years, featuring everything from spaghetti to lipsticks to Life advertisements, here.
About The Artwork Series of works that touch on questions such as: what do you believe? Are we all deluded? Is it all in the mind? Original Created: 2012 Subjects: Popular culture Materials: Canvas Styles: Expressionism Figurative Illustration Pop Art Mediums: Acrylic Oil bars Details & Dimensions Painting: Acrylic on Canvas Original: One-of-a-kind Artwork Size: 60.2 W x 48 H x 1.4 D in Frame: Not Framed Ready to Hang: Not applicable Packaging: Ships in a Box