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Roy Lichtenstein
Roy was born in 1923 in New York City and raised in an
upper-middle class family. As a boy, he loved tinkering with mechanical
things, exploring the Natural History Museum, listening to radio
programs, playing jazz music and creating art. After high school, he went
to college in Ohio State University to study fine art and graphic design,
but shortly after beginning, he had to join the army to fight in WWII.
Luckily, he was able to serve as a cartographer, which is a map
draftsman. Three years later, he returned to Ohio State to finish his
degree and worked as an art teacher and graphic designer so he could
earn a salary while he explored his own painting. His early painting style
seemed to be a fusion of comic books and Picasso, whom he admired
greatly. He used flat shapes, solid colors and thick black outlines.
Although he was interested in the abstract art of the 1950s, he thought it
was too popular and too easy for anyone to copy. It seemed that anyone
could express their feeling on a canvas with colorful paint. So he
searched for different and unique ways to
create art.
After the war, Americans became consumed with buying
products. Newspapers, magazines, billboards, and televisions became
heavily used mediums for mass communication, advertisements and
commercials. This gave rise to another art form called commercial art. A
graphic designer is a type of artist who creates artwork to sell products.
As Roy worked as a graphic designer, he realized how important this
type of art was to Americans, yet it was not appreciated as much as fine
art paintings. He believed that both art forms relied on a visual code to
communicate its message. Along with several other graphic designers,
he came up with an idea to transform common objects, like a soup can
label, into iconic superstars. This style of art became known as Pop Art!
These artists used bright, shiny colors, snappy designs and catchy words
like, “Whaam!” Even though it ridiculed the shallowness of American
culture it was humorous and easy to understand.
In 1961, Roy had been experimenting with comic strips in the Pop
Art style when his son challenged him one day. He pointed to a Mickey
Mouse story book and said; "I bet you can't paint as good as that, eh,
Dad?" Well, of course he took the challenge and the result was a
painting that launched him into the style of pop art that he became
famous for. Ultimately, Roy Lichtenstein caused people to reevaluate the
definition of art and helped elevate illustration and comic book art to be
just as valuable as fine art. He was one of the most popular and
successful artists of the American Modern art movement. He died of
pneumonia in 1997 at the age of 74.
© Brook Mesenbrink 2017
Roy Lichtenstein
Materials:
Drawing paper, colored markers, pencil/eraser, stencil alphabet letters,
dot stencil, magnifying glass
Elements of Art:
1. A Line is a mark made by a tool that represents the outline edges
of an object, shape, surface, shadow or color. There are a variety
of lines: thick, thin, curvy, strait, zigzag, short, long, implied, etc.
(Variety means many different kinds of the same element.)
2. Unity describes the similarity of the elements which join them
together.
© Brook Mesenbrink 2017
Look At: “Whaam!” 1963, oil on canvas, 67 x 160 inches
This painting was inspired by a comic book called,
“All American Men of War”, that was popular in the 1950s.
Roy studied popular comic books, then appropriated, or borrowed,
certain elements from it that he thought were most important. He
transformed the original by simplifying the composition, colors and lines,
then enlarging the art onto a large canvas. Some people criticized him as
a copycat, while others praised his irony. This painting is as tall as an
adult and longer than two adults laying
down end to end.
Q: Look at the “All American Men of War” comic strip. Can you
find the elements that he borrowed (appropriate) from this
comic strip and translated into his own style? (Notice the
airplanes, lines, explosion shapes, etc.)
When comics are printed, the lines are made with tiny dots of ink,
called Benday dots. Sometimes they are used to create value or shading.
Use a magnifying glass to compare the original comic strip with Roy’s
painting. Roy emphasized the process of printing by enlarging and
painting the Benday dots onto his canvas with a stencil.
Q: Can you find the dots in “Whaam!”? (use magnifying glass)
Art Analysis:
1. Find Lines: What kinds of lines do you see in “Wham!”? Do the
dots make lines? (An implied line is created when two or more
points make an invisible line.)
2. Find Unity: What unifies all the different lines? (color black)
Practice Art Instructions: See separate page
Lines Unity
Variety
© Brook Mesenbrink 2017
Roy Lichtenstein Art Practice:
With a pencil, trace around stencil alphabet letters to draw an interjection-onomatopoeia word (such as Wham, Pow, Bam, Splat, Zoom, Skdoosh, Boom, Blam, Boing, or Kaboom), in the middle of the paper. Outline with a black Sharpie marker.
If a stencil is not available, draw the letters large and spaced apart lightly with a pencil.
Draw a line around the initial lines to make shapes of the letters.
Erase the inner lines and trace over the shapes with a black Sharpie marker.
Add horizontal lines inside the shapes. Thicken the line of one side of the shapes with black marker.
Around the word, draw a curvy, puffy line that becomes a cloud shape with a black marker. Next, draw a zigzag line around the puffy line with a black marker. Use variety in the length and direction of lines. Draw single lines shooting outward from the words.
Color the zigzag shape red and the inside of the letter shapes yellow. Leave the cloud white. Add a pattern of Benday dots by making rows of blue marker point marks around the shapes.
© Brook Mesenbrink 2017
Roy Lichtenstein
Original Disney Book Look Mickey!, Roy Lichtenstein
Whaam!, Roy Lichtenstein
All American Men of War, Comic Strip
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