The Andy Warhol Pop Art Legacy
Posted: Friday, February 17, 2006
by Jessica Corbett
Andy Warhol Posters 'n' Pop
During the second half of the twentieth century, popular culture and the mass media gained a huge significance in America. The style of art that was both a product and critique of the social milieu was known as pop art. No other artist is more identified with this artistic style as Andy Warhol. His signature soup cans and silk screens helped to define an entire artistic movement making Andy Warhol undoubtedly the “Prince of Pop" in the art world.
The Andy Warhol pop art phenomenon may be best characterized by his ‘Campbell’s Soup Cans’ silk screen work. In fact, Warhol’s big break into widespread recognition came with the 1962 Los Angeles exhibition of his now famous depictions of the soup cans. Drawn from the mass marketing culture, the ‘Campbell’s Soup Cans’ appeared larger than life and made a definite statement about the consumer-driven society that had become so prevalent in America.
Andy Warhol defined pop art by changing the way that images are seen. His work was a close interaction between art and popular culture and his strategy was to combine the two by appropriating different well-known cultural images. Andy Warhol was a multi-talented artist who not only influenced the pop art movement, but also shaped and inspired countless artists to come.
Claes Oldenburg, and Roy Lichtenstein are presented alongside works by California artists Ed Ruscha, Wayne Thiebaud, and Robert Arneson, among others, underscoring the role of the West Coast in this pivotal movement.
Article written by Jessica Corbett:
Jessica Corbett is an modern day artist and is the proud owner/author of the website Andy Warhol Posters 'n' Pop.
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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)I really enjoyed the information provided about Andy Warhol.
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