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  2. Pop art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pop_art

    The term "pop art" was officially introduced in December 1962; the occasion was a "Symposium on Pop Art" organized by the Museum of Modern Art. [19] By this time, American advertising had adopted many elements of modern art and functioned at a very sophisticated level.

  3. Colored Mona Lisa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colored_Mona_Lisa

    Andy Warhol, the leading artist of the pop art movement, was an enthusiast of pop culture. In response to the US tour of the Mona Lisa, Warhol created his own multicolored depiction, Colored Mona Lisa. [4] It is an early example of his prowess of inextricably linking high art and consumer culture. [2]

  4. Ben Day process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Day_process

    The technique has been widely used in color comic books, especially in the mid 20th century, to inexpensively create shading and secondary colors. [5] [6] [7] The process differs from the halftone dots, which can vary continuously in size to produce gradations of shading or color, and are commonly produced from photographs. Ben Day dots are of ...

  5. Whaam! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whaam!

    A new generation of artists emerged in the late 1950s and early 1960s with a more objective, "cool" approach characterized by the art movements known today as minimalism, [6] hard-edge painting, [7] color field painting, [8] the neo-Dada movement, [9] Fluxus, [10] and pop art, all of which re-defined the avant-garde contemporary art of the time ...

  6. Campbell's Soup Cans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campbell's_Soup_Cans

    Warhol's pop-art work differed from serial works by artists such as Monet, who used series to represent discriminating perception and show that a painter could recreate shifts in time, light, season, and weather with hand and eye. Warhol is now understood to represent the modern era of commercialization and indiscriminate "sameness".

  7. Look Mickey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look_Mickey

    Look Mickey (also known as Look Mickey!) is a 1961 oil on canvas painting by Roy Lichtenstein.Widely regarded as the bridge between his abstract expressionism and pop art works, it is notable for its ironic humor and aesthetic value as well as being the first example of the artist's employment of Ben-Day dots, speech balloons and comic imagery as a source for a painting.