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Rule No. 10:
Art can make you think, it can make you wonder, but it should always make you feel.
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Pop Art
The Pop Art movement epitomizes the consumerism of the latter half of the 20th Century. The movements name, coined by English critic Lawrence Alloway, referred to the movements obsession with and depiction of popular culture. Regarded as a reaction to the "subject-less" works of Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art used common everyday objects and commercial imagery and iconography as subject matter, and rejected any distinction between good and bad taste.

The movement was primarily based in New York and London. Along with the commercialism and trivial nature of the subject matter, Pop Art was also commonly produced using mass production, commercial techniques such as silkscreening and the now famous "ben-day" dots Roy Lichtenstein used to simulate the printing techniques used in newspaper and magazine presses.

The Pop Art master works are often seen as the symbol of mid to late 20th Century art. Andy Warhol's incredibly popular paintings of Campbell Soup cans and multi-colored silkscreens of Marilyn Monroe, along with Jasper Johns's multiple renderings of the American flag have all captured the imagination and interest of the art world and continue to inspire the infusion of pop culture into modern art.

Did You Know
that the legend and fame achieved by Pop Art master Andy Warhol was unprecedented by any other visual artist with the exception of Pablo Picasso. Warhol and Picasso as personalities at times transcended their own art and became icons in their own right garnering international fame, making Warhol's famous statement that "everyone gets 15 minutes of fame" very fitting.

Popular Artists

Popular Images
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Andy Warhol
Campbell's Soup I (Tomato), 1968
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Keith Haring
Untitled
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Andy Warhol
Flowers, 1964
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Andy Warhol
Guns, c. 1981-82
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Andy Warhol
Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn), 1967 (hot pink)
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Andy Warhol
Gun, c. 1981-82
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Andy Warhol
I think everybody should like everybody
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Andy Warhol
But I always say, one's company, two's a crowd, and three's a party
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Roy Lichtenstein
Masterpiece, 1962
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Andy Warhol
The world fascinates me
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Andy Warhol
The idea of waiting for something makes it more exciting
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Andy Warhol
I wonder if it's possible to have a love affair that lasts forever