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POP ART PORTRAITS

Oedipus (Elvis Johnson #1)
by Ray Johnson (1956-7)
© Estate of Ray Johnson at Richard L Feigen & Co
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TOURING EXHIBITION
Publications
A groundbreaking exhibition Pop
Art Portraits - the first to explore the role and significance
of portraiture within one of the world's most popular and influential
art movements. Conceived as a visual dialogue between American
and British Pop Art, this exhibition brings together 52 key works
by 28 Pop artists working on both sides of the Atlantic in the
1950s and 1960s. These include major portraits by Andy Warhol,
Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and Roy Lichtenstein alongside
those of Peter Blake, Richard Hamilton, David Hockney and Patrick
Caulfield.
The exhibition examines these
artists' shared engagement with depicting the famous, using images
taken from advertising, pop music, the cinema, magazines and
newspapers. It also shows how Pop Art shattered the conventions
of portraiture, creating a new genre of fantasy portraits using
comic books, magazines and other images drawn from popular culture.
The exhibition explores Pop Art's complex and enormously creative
engagement with portraiture and is divided into six sections:
Precursors of Pop; Portraits and the Question of Style; Fantasy;
Film; Marilyn; Innocence and Experience. The Marilyn
section is one of the highlights of the exhibition, bringing
together works by British and American Pop artists in the context
of their shared obsession with images of Marilyn Monroe. Presented
as a secular chapel to one of the late 20th Century's goddesses,
the exhibition reunites several important works originally shown
in the celebrated tribute exhibition, Homage to Marilyn Monroe,
held at Sydney Janis Gallery, New York, in 1967. This section
focuses on one of the principal themes of the show: the way Pop
portraits transformed familiar images into works of art of great
technical virtuosity, lasting originality, and enduring fascination.
Venues
Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart
28 February - 8 June 2008
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