In life, Roy Lichtenstein was one of the biggest names in pop art. Now, more than a decade after his death, his paintings still get double takes. Here's Erin Moriarty of "48 Hours": Whimsical ...
A once-in-a-generation collection of Roy Lichtenstein’s art is heading to auction in May, with Sotheby’s expecting the vibrant selection to pull in more than $35 million (€30.8 million). The sale will ...
Recognized for his masterful ability to turn comic strip aesthetics into high art, Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997) was a pioneering force in Pop art, along with peers like James Rosenquist, Andy Warhol, ...
Phillips is shining a spotlight on Pop art star Roy Lichtenstein this summer—and providing a jolt of energy into what is typically very quiet stretch of the art-world calendar—with a special sale ...
The first thing that struck me when I walked into the vast and exhilarating Roy Lichtenstein retrospective that opens this week at the Art Institute of Chicago was that it was in the Rice Building, a ...
In this May 11, 2012 photo, Dorothy Lichtenstein, widow of pop artist Roy Lichtenstein, stands between his artworks “Cold Shoulder,” left, and “Masterpiece” at the Art Institute of Chicago. The museum ...
Several stories have been bruited about regarding Roy Lichtenstein’s first forays into Pop Art, the movement that blew open fine galleries to mass culture in the 1960s—and a movement that he would ...
Roy Lichtenstein is best known for his dotted, angst-filled comics featuring beautiful ladies in distress. But a major retrospective at the... One Dot At A Time, Lichtenstein Made Art Pop Whaam!
One clue in the show is that just before he made the rag-painted abstractions, Lichtenstein made a series of drawings that combined free-flowing Abstract-Expressionist gestures with images of Bugs ...
When George Washington crossed the Delaware River to ambush enemy soldiers in the Battle of Trenton, nobody was on hand to portray his masterful tactical maneuver. The famous depiction hanging in the ...
There’s nothing sadder than a poor artist on a streetcorner with a cup in his hand and a sign around his neck that reads, “Will pencil for food.” But that’s the fate of artists who are out of ...
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