An Illustrated Dictionary of Pop Art (Art Ebook) PDF
An Illustrated Dictionary of Pop Art (Art Ebook) PDF
An Illustrated Dictionary of Pop Art (Art Ebook) PDF
POPART
José Pierre
Barron's $3.95
BOSTOTSI
PUBLIC
LIBRARY
POP ART
An Illustrated Dictionary
A Dictionary of Expressionism
A Dictionary of Impressionism
A Dictionary of Surrealism
POP ART
An Illustrated Dictionary
José PIERRE
TRANSLATED BY W. J. STRACHAN
CHEVALIER DES ARTS ET LETTRES
EYRE METHUEN
LONDON
JUN 1980 ,N/6V9^
,7^^ A^ 53/3
CODMAN SQUARE
TRANSLATOR'S NOTE
French Terms
Where appropriate and customary, terms denoting a movement
or group originating in France, such as Le Nouveau RéaHsme,
founded by Pierre Restany, and La Jeune Peinture, have been
retained in French, and not itaHcized. Similarly in the case of the
Nouveau Roman.
Captions
Where appropriate the captions which are in French in the
original edition have been translated. The exceptions are where
the non-French artist used a French title e.g. Richard Hamil-
ton's Hommage à Chrysler Corp. (sic). The eccentricity of Pop
Art captions will be no surprise to those famiHar with the
movement. The problem has rather been that of the French
author having to translate English and American titles. The
reverse process involved identifying Warhol's Dance diagrams
(for Fox-trot etc) with plans de chaussettes and Rosenquist's Blue
feet (Look alive) with Dépêchez-vous etc. One was almost
surprised to find examples as easily identifiable as P-Peut-être for
Lichtenstein's 'M-Maybe'.
I make this point about title for the benefit of visitors to
international collections and exhibitions of Pop Art such asone
of the former, extremely representative, now housed in Le
Musée National d'Art Moderne section of the Centre national
d'art et de culture Georges Pompidou, Paris, which opened -
appropriately enough as far as this book is concerned - with an
exhibition of Marcel Duchamp, whose 'ready-mades' are so
closely Hnked with Pop Art. One cannot recommend a visit to
the Pop Art section of the Centre too strongly to readers of this
book who wish to follow up the subject.
heaven.
Aragon
made.
THE TWO FACES OF POP ART
objects' and 'boxes'. The fact remains however that Pop Art in
Art 2. The real difference between the two phases may well be
of a metaphysical, perhaps poetic order. It has certainly nothing
to do with aesthetic merit.
this style of Pop painting severs all connections with the grand
pictorial manner of the past, including 19th century photo-
graphic academism and even more with the movements that
brought about the break of modern art with the representational
such as Impressionism, Cubism, Geometric Abstraction, Sur-
realist Automatism and Abstract Expressionism. However, the
was first and foremost the virtue of Pop Art was its deliberate
aggression against good taste and the noble artistic traditions of
the past, an aggression which took the form of flinging in the
public's face the stuffed animals that Rauschenberg fixed on his
canvases, Jasper Johns' bronze-cast electric lamps, Campbell's
soup-cans repeated ad nauseam by Andy Warhol, Rosenquist's
vast Dance-diagrams (Fox Trot etc.) or plates of spaghetti,
Wesselmann's painted nipples and the lips of smoking women,
the sophisticated enlargements of mediocre comic-paper images
to which Lichtenstein devoted his attention, monster bags of
chips and 'soft' lavatory seats, made by Oldenburg. Not that
Pop Art and Pop Art 2, in particular, neglected the nostalgic
dimension, nor was unaware of the drama of the individual and
indifferent to international events. Its novelty and specificity,
however, consisted above all in focusing the viewer's attention
on objects or familiar images, after first endowing them with a
strange power. Taking advantage of this apparent complicity
which from the systematic reference to the banal and
resulted
everyday element in 'consumer society', Pop artists finally
opened the eyes and doubtless also the hearts of their contem-
poraries to a world of poetry by showing them that from images
which they had every reason to believe were those of resignation
and social and philosophic conformism, could suddenly spring
impressions never before experienced and, precisely for that
reason, revolutionary.
Jose Pierre.
I
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Duchamp: Ready-mades
Surrealist Objects
Picasso: constructions
Schwitters: Merz
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Appropriation. Originally
coined by Pierre Restany, this term
is the 'Open sesame' of the Pop
movement as a whole, since the
Pop Artist, according to each case,
'appropriates' the daily objects
around him, images introduced by
the mass media, the mass-media
style or even the media themselves.
Arakawa, Shusaku
(Nagoya,
Japan, 1936). Only
most super-
the
ficial resemblances Hnk Arakawa
2. Woody van Amen's Assemb- and a whole current of Pop Art
lages combine ingenuity, irony, from Jasper Johns to Edward
fantasy, anxiety and indifference. Ruscha via George Brecht and In-
They are imbued with nostalgia for diana - whose participants have
the past and speculation about the often adopted printed characters or
future. Together, these elements numbers as themes for pictorial
form a kind of fantastic and comic expression. Although Arakawa's
chronicle of the artist's moods inscriptions are reminiscent of
according to his reactions to the those of Larry Rivers, their nature
major or minor events of everyday is in fact totally different, since,
life. In its expression of spon- instead of echoing an image, they
taneous nonconformity, his con- form a substitute for it, designating
tribution is one of the most original a bird, a woman, a cloud or the sea,
of the w^hole of Pop art. the better to evoke what is stated
but not shown.
Anti-Pop. Title of the manifesto
pubHshed by Boris Lurie on the Argentina. Ruben Santantonin's
occasion of his exhibition at the vigorous Assemblages, Hke An-
Gertrude Stein Gallery, New York tonio Berni's painting-
in 1964 and w^hich sums up the assemblages, which describe the
attitude of the 'Doom Artists', q.v. tribulations of his heroes, Juanito
Laguna and Ramona Montiel, are
Apple, Billy, name adopted by the evidences of the meeting of
first
23
Assemblage. Deschamps. Textile Picture. 1964.
Galerie Mathias Fels, Paris.
Axell.
Bird of Paradise. 1971.
Bastin. Cherry Sundae. 1970.
CollectionGuy Robert, Sainte-Adèle.
BAJ
Baj, Enrico (Milan, 1924). Pop statement that stands half-way be-
Art There is no shadow of doubt
1 . tween an ironic Jasper Johns' pro-
that Baj works under an assemb- vocation and a Magritte-like poetic
lagist Muse. This appHes equally to evocation.
his female portraits wholly com-
posed of trimmings on damask
materials, to his superb soldiers Baruchello,Gianfranco (Leghorn,
crumbling under the weight of in- Italy, 1924). The disconcerting
numerable medals, to those ugly itinerary presented by Baruchello's
httle demons who invade Alpine work (mostly in a wayward scatter
landscapes with their officious and of drawings, partly in-
detailed
salacious presence, to academic spired by comics and somewhat
nudes, mass-produced by piece- reminiscent of Fahlstrom and
workers, to sculptures constructed Bertholo) leads us some distance
of meccano parts and his all-cloth from Pop Art territory, since, as
Guernica of 1969. It is as an As- Alain Jouffroy has written, 'he at-
semblagist that Baj, thanks to an tempts to introduce the viewer into
exuberance which is never totally that Amazonas of thought known
lacking in aggressivity and to an as "the illegible" '.
only semi-serious affection for
materials, deserves his unique place Bastin, Michèle (Belgium, 1944).
in contemporary art. Although in With a tender and ingenuous grace
the final analysis, far removed from Michèle Bastin juxtaposes the dis-
Pop Art in the strict sense, Baj's creet promises of female flesh with
contribution enlarged the palette the downy plumage of birds, the
introduced by Cubist 'papiers col- rotundity of apples with the melt-
lés' and advanced the intrusion of ing savour of ice-creams. With him
the everyday element into aesthe- Pop Art becomes intimate and
tics. cosy.
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Belgium. Hoeydonck.
The Green Grass, 1967.
which are the scene of his pictures motorcars), transferred to the can-
between 1962 and 1966, and by vas by mechanical means.
virtue of which he occupied an
individual place between Arman Benyon, Eric (Geneva, 1935).
and Fahlstrom, he devoted his at- Endless curiosity first attracted him
tention to his 'reduced models' of a around 1960 to the assemblage of
somewhat childish charm in which various materials. Then, in 1962 to
sun, waves, clouds, boats and fish a particular treatment of the Pop
are set in motion by a piece of image based on a compHcated sys-
mechanism. tem of reading, involving princi-
ples of reversal and reflection. Fi-
Bertini, Gianni (Pisa, 1922). In nally, in 1964, towards the
1962, the exhibition entitled 'Le mechanically reproduced image in
Pays Réel' in which he showed which he attempts to make a sub-
flags, passports and official docu- jective use of the technical sources
ments bearing his name, marked of the process, his target being a
his conversion to Pop aesthetics. In mass-produced article capable of
truth, it is less a matter of conver- ruining the art market and the cult
sion than - as could be seen shortly of the unique artefact.
afterwards - a fusion between Lyri-
cal Abstraction (a field in which he Blake, Peter (Dartford, England,
had hitherto distinguished himself) 1932). Pop Art 2. Peter Blake's
and newspaper and magazine work would suffice on its own to
photographs (pin-ups, war scenes, counter the thesis that Pop Art was
30
BRUNING
the result of a critical or merely those of 1961-1962, are attractive
ironic attitude to popular culture as and casual, and constitute a kind of
spread by the mass media. When in anecdotal commentary on as-
1955 he embarked on the work On tronautics, the condition of
the Balcony - which he completed twentieth-century man or the glory
in 1957 - this repertory of imagery of the British navy. Then, in-
anticipated Pop Art clearly indi- trigued perhaps by the chevrons on
cates the artist's sole sources of airmail notepaper which he faith-
inspiration and sole obsessions. fully reproduced during those same
Whether he juxtaposes photo- years, he found a new outlet in
graphs of 'idols' with broad strips 1964 in non-figurative works, simi-
of colour (Find a Girl, 1960-1961), larly chevroned, but now extend-
lovingly reconstructs a toy-shop ing into the third dimension.
window, combines a reaHstic por-
trait of a music-hall or circus star or Brecht, George (Halfway, Ore-
all-inwrestling champion with an gon, 1962). Pop Art 1. George
assortment of small objects to com- Brecht occupies a marginal posi-
plete the significance of the icon tion in relation to Pop Art proper,
{Doktor K. 1965), Blake
Tortur, but many aspects of Post-Pop Art
seems much anxious to define a
less owe something to his influence.
style attuned to his private obses- On the one hand, his detailed and
sions than to extend them and complex ensembles of pigeon-
celebrate their themes. Or, more holes, drawers and cupboards are
exactly, when he shows his attach- conceived in such a way that they
ment to the content of this mid- cannot be taken in at a general
twentieth century popular culture, glance and invite further, analytical
he feels no necessity to subscribe to exploration. On the other hand, he
the pictorial forms it employs. On replaced Happenings - which he
the contrary, in his pin-up girls in considered too theatrical - with his
particular, we note that when, like Events, reduced to elementary ges-
so many of his fellow artists, he tures, a change that has not been
uses photographs as a starting- without influence on many artists
point, he spontaneously re- from Conceptual to Body Art. Fi-
introduces a sensuality of touch in nally, along with Ray Johnson, he
his painting that is completely alien is the initiator of Mail Art which
Boshier.
England's Glory. 1%1.
Grabowski Gallery,
London.
34
c:anai)a
train - aeroplane, on the same princi- lance in Wally Hedrick and m Funk
ples as painters use newsprint, Art proper. Finally it became re-
picture-frame, grained wall-paper as spectable and even aesthetic in
trompe-Voeif . On the equivalent works that can pass as being typi-
principlefrom Cubist 'papiers col- cally representative of Pop Art in
lés' John Cage replaced
therefore, California. Joe Goode
can be seen
premeditation by non-premedi- sustaining the role played by Neo-
tation: if there are to be 'sons collés' Dada or Jim Dine in New York. In
(glued sounds), let them stick Los Angeles Pop Art proper is
West coast of the U.S.A. the As- is known outside that country's
semblagist movement on the other frontiers. Concerning Dan Patter-
hand asserted itself with greater son (1884-1968) for example, a
vigour, imagination and precocity strange precursor who between
than in New York, as proved by 1947 and 1963 constructed an As-
the famous exhibition 'Common semblage of Carnation milk tins,
Art Accumulations' held in San we can say that he was the Trojan
About the same
Francisco in 1951. Horse of Pop Art. Al Neil
time Wallace Herman, Jess Collins (b.l924), Christo Dikeakos
and Bruce Conner were instrumen- (b.l946j, Ian Garioch (b.l936),
38
CÉSAR
Canada. Patterson.
Assemblage of
Carnation Milk tins.
1947-1%3.
National Gallery of
Canada, Ottawa.
^±^ ^r
at once from Art Nouveau \\ne2insm tural field (confirmed by the work
and the reaHst strip cartoons of the of Agostim, Oldenburg and Segal),
so-called Brussels school {The Ad- an ambiguity which causes the
ventures of Tintin, for example). most hithfully imitated object to
Caulfield might therefore be consi- assume a spontaneous irrationality.
dered more as a draughtsman than
a painter, were it not for the som- César. Name adopted by César
bre violence of the colours he em- Baldaccini (Marseilles, 1921) Pop
ploys. This would appear to relate Art 1 and Pop Art 2. Twice, thanks
39
Canada. Wieland. Boat Tragedy. 1964. Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto.
*^°'^^^^''—"'"""^""""^
to the ready-made, César has wren- the same time. This fact has not
ched himself away from his career prevented artists linked to some
as iron-welder to which, up to extent with Chicago, such as H. C.
1954, he thought he was con- Westermann, Red Grooms and
demned. The first time-1960-was Peter Saul from exercising a certain
that of his 'automobile compres- influence on the development of
sions' carried out in scrap-iron fac- Pop Art at one time or another. In
tory, images of pop civiHsation in the domain of Assemblage, in
which the gestural aspect of Ab- which we approach more nearly
stractExpressionism came to a than elsewhere 'the surreaHst ob-
cHmax - and its end. The second ject', George Cohen (b.l919) and
occasion, 1967, was that of his June Leaf (b.l929) were succeeded
polystyrene 'expansions', freely by Harry Bouras (b.l931), Don
diffused in space - a kind of in- Baum, Theodore Halkin and Whit-
voluntary homage to Surrealist au- ney Halstead (b.l926). The most
tomatism. It is fair to say of César, serious forms inspired by Pop Art
as of Andy Warhol, that his work is are probably the paintings by Art
pop when carried out by another Green, Phil Hanson, Victor Kord
agency. and Roy Schnackenber (b.l934) on
the one hand and, on the other, the
Che val- Bert rand. Name pin-ups of Frank Gallo (b.l933).
adopted by Jean-Paul Bourg (Paris, But the authentic spirit of Chica-
1932-Paris 1966). Pop Art 2. To- goan art is to be found nowadays in
wards the end of 1964, but only the artists of those ephemeral
briefly, a rain of images poured groups with such sybiline names as
down on the canvases of Cheval- 'The Hairy Who', 'The Non-
Bertrand. All equally in a Hght key, plussed Some', 'The Sunken City
whether the subject was a camel, an Rises', 'Marriage Chicago Style',
odaHsk, a Venus, a banana palm, a 'Chicago Antigua', 'The Artful
bugle or a Bengalee, lightened Codgers'. The works of two of
further by the luminous clarity of these artists, Irene Siegel and Karl
colour as arbitrary as it is possible Wirsum (b.l939) reveal only
for colour to be. From their inter- sporadic if intriguing Hnks with
weaving - as if they were a legacy Pop Art, whereas those of a Jim
from Picabia's ^transparences' - Nutt, an Ed Paschka or a Christina
emanates a bitter-sweet poetry. Ramberg, may be considered as
deliberate perversions (in the do-
Chicago. Pop Art in Chicago has main of oniric buffoonery,
never manifested itself in a pure caricatural verism or naif sensibili-
state, assuming such a state exists. ty) of pop aesthetics.
In fact the artistic climate of
Chicago is so deeply impregnated Christo. Name adopted by
with the fantastic and grotesque Christo Yavacheff (Gabravo, Bul-
that the interpretation of the imag- garia, 1935). The way Christo was
ery of the mass media inevitably annexed by Nouveau Réalisme
reveals an expressionistic or sur- when he created his first 'packag-
Cheval-Bertrand.
Lay Opera I. 1%6.
^t^4j
COMBINE-PAINTING
Christo. Packaging of 5450 m^.
1%7-1968.
46
CUT-UP
same reason as Kienholz, and al- corporated into the pictures and
though he rejects the latter's 'slices exploits an immense variety of
of life' as much as his large-scale plastic methods. As patriotic as
Verist or fantastic Environments, Joyce Wieland's works, its nation-
Bruce Conner was instrumental in alistic, not to say provincial accents
Assemblage to a
raising Californian are not immune from anarchicizing
very high level of invention and and even Dadaist elements. Above
expression. Everything in his work all, in a particularly intense range of
cance, reinforced rather than di- token in the work of Carra and
luted by the particularly 'cool' Morandi. Thus Lucio Del Pezzo's
structure of his canvases, implied is painting can be considered as the
by the silhouettes of female hitch- brilliant and astonishing sequel in
52
DUMAS
Doom Artists. Name given to a Dufrêne, François (Paris, 1930).
group of artists, the main figures Pop Art 1 . Thanks
to his décollages
among whom are Sam Goodman, or 'lacerated posters' - that is post-
Stanley Fisher and Boris Lurie. ers torn down and showing the
Since 1959 they have shown work pasted side - Dufrêne has won an
that aggressively and vehemently
is original place for himself among
opposed to Pop Art. his fellow poster-lacerators. The
backs of the advertisement posters
are treated by him in smooth,
Drexler, Rosalyn (New York, muted tones that border on silence.
1926). Pop Art 2. Through her
feeling for gesture and setting, in Dumas, Antoine (Quebec, 1932).
by everyday life or
scenes inspired Antoine Dumas's work provides a
'idols' of mass media, Rosalyn marvellous example of the shot in
Drexler has managed to break the arm that anecdotal painting has
away from the traditional jumble received from Pop Art. A remarka-
of images, thereby achieving a ble draughtsman who freely admits
more disciplined style. his debt to Art Nouveau and Dcco
1925 style, he also uses extremely
Duchamp, Marcel (Blainville, subdued tones in his affectionate
1887- Neuilly-sur-Seine, 1968). If yet mocking chronicle of life in
we consider his last work. Given: V Quebec.
The Waterfall. 2° The illuminating gas
(1946-1966) as the popular version
of his 'Large Glass' painting The
Bride stripped bare by her Bachelors
even (1915-1923), we are perhaps
justified in claiming that Marcel
Duchamp's work - posthumously
- can be considered under the head-
ing of Pop. Furthermore, in his
three-dimensional work, he had
been definitely inspired by the En-
vironments of Kienholz and
George Segal.
r>
Del Pezzo. Presences. 1967.
Studio Marconi, Milan.
J6
ERRÔ
to everything that tended to oc- bunked all the painters who had the
cupy a great deal of space. misfortune to precede Rafael Sol-
bes and Manuel Valdés.
Episcope. An instrument indis-
pensable to every self-respecting Erro. Name adopted by Gud-
Pop artist, since it enables him to munder Gudmundson Ferro
project photographs, advertise- (Olafswik, Iceland, 1932). When in
ment or pornographic images and 1964 Erro systematically juxtap-
every other kind of document on to osed images taken from the 'musée
the painter's canvas. imaginaire' (cp, André Malraux)
and the inexhaustible and savage
Equipo Cronica.* Pop Art 2. imagery Hfted from the mass
Constituted in 1964, as the result of media, the violence he brought to
the encounter in Valencia between this confrontation is such as to
Rafael Solbes and Manuel Valdés, throw doubt on the artist's mo-
Equipo Cronica, under the pretext tives. On lower level of inspira-
a
of making a 'critical' use, pictorial- tion, for example in the American
an art derived from
ly exploited, of Interiors, invaded by Vietcong sol-
HOT
30GS
ÉaiÊÊÊmm
57
Errô. Homage to the
Painter Asian. 1972.
Environment. Segal.
The Restaurant Window. 1%7.
Collection Ludwig, Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne.
EVENT
h;
FAHL STROM
Fahlstrôni, Ôyvind (Sâo Paulo, those of Pop Art proper, the vir-
1928). Pop Art 2. During his pro- tuosity which he brings to the
longed dialogue with signs, Fahl- fusion of elements borrowed from
strom envisaged three successive mass media culture provides a mas-
solutions: in the first, w^hich culmi- terly and moving lesson in Pop
nated in Ade-Ledic-Nander II (1955- style.
1957) it was a matter of inventing
signs, as it were from scratch, kind Figuration Narrative. Put
of subconscious hieroglyphics; the forward by Gerald Gassiot-Talabot
second, with its cUmax in Dr. in 1964, this notion
corresponds to
Livingstone, I presume (1961), con- a development the time-
of
sisted in inventing new signs with element, frequently observable in
the help of fragments rendered un- Pop Art.
recognizable, old signs (borrowed
from strip-cartoons); the third was Flexner, Roland (Nice, 1944).
the adoption of the ready-mades After a series of objects, ostensibly
from the most conventional adven- dedicated to Man Ray, Roland
ture cartoon strips, removing Flexner has undertaken a systema-
them, not only from their original tic structural analysis of an ideal
context but from any context Pop object, the Camel cigarette
whatsoever. In fact, since 1962 j)acket. A
vigorous fantasy based
Fahlstrom has never ceased trying on an endless examination of every
out innumerable possibiHties of possible combination of form, col-
'variable paintings' in which mag- our and material of the model
netized elements can be moved under consideration has thus pres-
around on the surface by the spec- ided over the realization of a com-
tator according to whether the lat- pletely novel work of art.
ter follows the dictates of his im-
agination {Sitting . . . six months Flipper (or Pin-ball machine).
later, 1962) or falls with some
in The decoration on electric billiard
rule or other suggested by the tables in the 'fifties, especially those
game {The Planetarium, 1963). The bearing the Gottlieb signature, is
hang up!\ 1969) or scissors {The urban development and the mass
1973) only for con-
Anti-castrator^ media invited.
juratory ends in order that real
communications can be set up and
the freedoms of mind and body be
established.
6i
Fahlstrôm. Dr. Schweitzer's Last Mission. 1964-1966.
Sidney Janis Gallery, New York.
Figuration Narrative. Voss. Bravo Monsieur Durand. 1%6.
GASIOROWSKI
Gasiorowski.
Mondai. 1%6.
The Artist's Collection.
6?
GNOLI
kind of pop imagery, imbued how- vast 'plans' of heads of hair, bed-
ever in his case with affection and covers, divans, table-cloths, shirts,
illuminated by the clear Côte neckties, shoes, pockets or but-
d'Azur sunlight that reminds us of tonholes, Gnoh fascinated not so
is
66
GRISI
1937). Pop Art 1. When he places Art is nothing more than a kind of
one milk bottle, or several, at the inviting threshold.
base of his paintings, as he so often
did between 1962 and 1964, Joe Graham, Robert (Mexico, 1938).
Goode not in fact repeating
is Pop Art The tiny wax
2. dolls that
Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns or Jim Robert Graham encloses in plexi-
Dine. He is inviting the spectator glass globes fulfil innocent
this
to a meditation of a metaphysical voyeurism as he guiltlessly sur-
nature on painting: the dispropor- prises attractive creatures, solely
tion betw^een object and canvas occupied sunbathing and finally
in
would seem to signify the trifling freed from the tyranny of the
weight of ordinary reality com- bikini.
pared with the body of aesthetic
experience. Similarly, in 1966, the Grisi, Laura (b. Rhodes). Pop Art
fragment of staircase shown by 2.With a fluid combination of cut-
Goode could doubtless be inter- outs, mirrors, lights, sheets of
preted as an invitation to lose - or metal and painting, Laura Grisi
foil
find - oneself beyond the realm of has, up to 1967, endeavoured to
tangible things. For Joe Goode Pop convey the fascination exercised on
67
GROOMS
Hains. SEITA. c. 1%5-1%6.
68
Gnoli. The Sofa. 1%8.
Collection Blanche Fabry, Paris.
V
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HAINS
70
HOCKNEY
difference that the artist was pro- crushed beer cans, painted TV.-
ducing everything out of himself cabinets, Assemblages built up
and accomplishing the ceremony in from bits of radio or refrigerator
sohtude. But when, in 1959, Kap- equipment or intentionally feeble
row. Red Grooms, Oldenburg, variants of the U.S.A. flag, en-
Jim Dine, Robert Whitmann, fol- riched with the word 'peace', trains
lowed by others, organized Hap- surmounted with the balloon
penings, these turned into Envi- 'chug', or his ironic
commentaries
ronments, composed of real or im- on the Vietnam war. But he has
itated urban detritus, of the kind still to overcome the conspiracy of
that people - including the artist silence.
himself - encounter as they go
about their everyday business. Hefferton, Phillip (Detroit,
These spectacles are staged mostly Michigan, 1933). His best-known
in artists' studios or in galleries but works are commentaries of an in-
always with an audience present. genuous and flippant composition
They are offered therefore as works on American bank-bills.
of art, replacing traditional works
of art which could not in any way Hernmarck, Helena Barynina
be a substitute for them (not even (Sweden, 1941). Pop Art 2. Her
Rauschenburg's Combine-paint- special merit is that she has adapted
ings which at a pinch could be the themes and style of Pop Art to
considered as reminiscences of tapestry, and most feHcitously.
Happenings). The Happening then David Widman has stated that the
emerges as the most ambitious for- effect produced by her tapestries is
mula of Assemblage, the kind that akin to that of the flow of electric
- by the use of a kind of collage - impulses of the huge strip-lighting
aims at introducing human beings, adverts which sparkle above Times
even life itself into the work of art. Square, New York and Piccadilly
Circus, London.
Ha worth, Jann (Hollywood,
1942). Pop Art 2. In a way that is at Hockney, David (Bradford, Eng-
once satirical and imbued with nos- land, 1937). Pop Art 2. Disdamed
talgia, Jann Howorth has chosen by Pop Art purists, faulted for his
padded cloth as her medium in eclecticism, David Hockney is
film-stars of the Thirties, such as tists the most esteemed in his own
Mae West, W. C. Fields, Shirley country, and precisely as one. Since
Temple. She is Peter Blake's wife. in Pop culture success is the acid
test, this fact can hardly be ignored.
Hedrick, Wally (Pasadena, Hockney, an outstanding
Cahfornia, 1928). Pop Art 1 and 2. draughtsman, emerges as the
Wally Hedrick cuts a figure in chronicler of period with a
his
California as a satirical pioneer of particular aptitude for describing
Pop Art, Funk Art and quite a the idle life of 'top people' among
number of other things, whether whom to be seen acting that role is
7'
Hamilton. Interior II. 1964.
Tate Gallery, London.
'
l'
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HYPERREALISM
74
HYPERREALISM
graphs and all the hazards of 'ren- with Pop Art. In the realm of
dering' attributable to mass media. sculpture the gulf that separates the
Some of the Hyperrealist painters, casts of Segal and Oldenburg -
such as Jack Beal (b. 1931), John close to Expressionism or Surreal-
Clem Clarke (b. 1937), Robert ism - from the Hyperrealist casts,
Cottingham (b. 1935), Malcolm whether those of John de Andrea
Morley (b. 1931) or Joe Raffaele (b. (b. 1941) with their Puritan idealist
1933) keep at a certain distance slant, or those of Duane Hanson (b.
7^
Indiana. Love. 1968.
7«
JOHNS
several flags one above the other or lush colours to describe it. Thus the
covers the stars and stripes with a skirt of a pretty girl passing by can,
sufficiently creamy white to make in Allen Jones' eyes, merge into the
them almost illegible. For Jasper rainbow or into the cloud which
Johns, the star-spangled banner is produces them - and in one of his
no more important than a beer can. most felicitous metaphors - the
The only thing that counts is the parachute. A similar fusion of the
quality of the painting. So we see contours and subtle indications of,
that whileopening the way to Pop this time, male and female, sug-
Art proper, he resolutely put him- gests in a way which no previous
self outside it. painter has achieved, the loss of the
partners' identities in a loving em-
Johnson, Ray (Detroit, Michigan, brace {Hermaphrodite, 1963). This
1927). Pop Art 1. In his street lyrical use of painterly resources is
Kienholz. Back Seat Dodge 38, 1%4. Dwan Gallery, New York.
82
KITAJ
1935), Pop Art 2. If Pop Art is truly predeliction for plumbing, sanitary
that form of art which borrows its equipment and the surgeon's kit.
'subjects' and style from 'consumer The fragments of images which
society', Klapheck's work, as it has coUide and collect according to the
evolved unflaggingly and without rules of collage, set about it in an
interruption since 1955 - the date of even more hermetic way than in
his first Typewriter - deserves a Rosenquist, as if Klasen refused to
place of honour in the movement say too much or denied us access to
he pioneered and illustrated. If, his deepest thoughts. Are we then
however, the images used in the to consider him as a mere witness,
Pop Art repertory owe nothing to or, on the contrary, as an organizer
outside some purists
sources, as of confrontations between flesh
maintain, it becomes clear that and metal, laughter and cruelty, the
Klapheck's which embody a com- orgasm and the bidet? When in
mentary full of anguish and 1971, the intrusion of real objects -
humour on the intimate relations lavatory or surgical - becomes par-
we entertain with famihar objects, ticularly noticeable, we see a ten-
are alien to Pop Art and doubtless dency of the painted image to be-
much closer to Surrealism. It come autonomous, exclude
would seem hardly likely that the dialogue and finally to arrive very
images chosen by Pop Art would close to the most austere photo-
86
KRUSHENICK
87
^^
T r-
^
,j
Klasen. Bandaged Woman. 1968.
Galerie Mathias Fels, Paris.
Lichtenstein. Driving. 1%3.
Collection Sig. Sigra Agnelli, Turin.
90
LICHTENSThIN
Tyne, England, 1936). Pop Art 2. lified drawing of the originals and
uses colour in flat areas of crude
Skilfully simulating photogravure-
screen effects so as to make them colour, imitating photogravure-
screens to vary the colour density
evoke nostalgia or desire and bold-
(using the famous punctuation of
ly contrasting them with flat areas
of colour or schematic drawing,
Ben Day dots.) During that and the
Gerald Laing between 1962 and
following year when we compare
Lichtenstein's canvases with their
1965 produced attractive images
dedicated to film stars of the Thir-
models, we realize the perseverance
pin-up with which the painter has refined
ties, girls, parachutists and
his handling, tightened effects and
racing-drivers.
at the same time, universalized the
Lichtenstein, Roy (New York, composition. Nevertheless, it is
1923). Pop Art 2. It seems to have not until 1963 that we see him
been in sketching effigies of escape the heaviness, looseness and
Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse general overloading that bogs
for the benefit of his two boys that down work. Meantime Lich-
his
Roy Lichtenstein escaped from the tenstein found the essential
has
clutches of Abstract Expressionism source of his inspiration in comic-
and found his own way. We know books - deliberately chosen from
was struggling with
that in 1961 he among those distinguished neither
the elementary
house-and-home for the originality of their language
mythology, from the cooker to the nor their draughtsmanship,
engagement ring, from pedal-bin whethev the comic-strips treat of
to the hand-shake, from oven- romantic love or violence. And the
ready turkey to basket-ball shoes. year 1963 shows an expansion of
Directly inspired by advertise- the artist's style into the 'epic' vein,
ments and, occasionally, comic- exemplified in the celebrated
books, it is the coarseness of the Whaam!, as well as into the roman-
9'
Lindner. Pillow. 1966. Collection Ludwig,
Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne.
London. Paolozzi. Moonstrip Empire News.
Donald Duck meets Mondrian. 1%5.
LINDNER
tic vein, with the three outstanding Curiously enough, however, Lich-
know
successes: I Brad, Hopeless
. . . tenstein does not abandon Ben Day
and Drowning Girl, in which we Dots even when he is matching
recognise unmistakeable ac-
an himself, symbolically at any rate,
knowledgement to the flamboyant with the abstract-decorative art
linearism of Art Nouveau. The current in his early childhood. So
artist spent 1964 assimilating his that, if he is no longer a Pop artist
previous conquests (with a fine in his themes, he firmly remains
work We rose up slowly and a very one in his technical handling.
uncompromising military triptych
As I Opened Fire. .), and sys- .
Lindner, Richard (Hamburg,
tematically developing his re- 1901). Pop Art 2. When he fmally
Mondrian
creations of Picasso and came into his own - albeit tardily -
on which he had embarked in 1962. m New York m
1953 {The Meet-
Finally we witness his escape into ing), Richard Lindner was the only
landscapes of cloud, glorious sun- significant painter who owed his
setsand views of Greek temples. success to the high quality of his
This was the time when the art drawing and his colour. And as
critics, eager to celebrate the advent such, he doubtless encouraged the
who, in his feeling for
of a painter painters of Pop Art proper to
monumentality and refining- choose subjects from everyday life
down, was in every way compara- and paint them with the same as-
ble to such abstract painters as surance as if they were abstract
Frank Stella and Ellsworth Kelly, paintings. In 1962 Lindner, in his
fairly fell on his neck. Lichtenstein turn, profited by the Pop emanci-
seems to have lent them a favour- pation to describe
in terms of
able ear, since, in 1965, after a final amazingly formal boldness urban
series of very handsome female fauna, reduced to two archetypal
faces - inspired by comic-strips figures - the corseted Prostitute
{Girl with hair ribbon; M. . .Maybe), and the Pimp with fantastic neck-
he embarked on commentaries on ties. He remains, however, above
his own technique, with the 'explo- all a very great expressionist
sions' partly composed of
reliefs painter.
screens which he uses for his Ben
Day Dots, the Ceramic Sculptures, in London. As opposed to the way
which he stresses the arbitary itcame about in New York, British
nature of his pictorial method and Pop Art arose from a combined
the enlargements of abstract- action of artists and writers who
expressionist brush strokes. Two took their inspiration from popular
or three examples of the latter are culture as put out by mass media,
admirable. Next he proceeds to emphasizing its originality and
make pastiches of '1925 Deco' in subsequently attempting to incor-
paintings and sculptures of extreme porate it into contemporary artistic
virtuosity, expressly made, it creation. In an initial period (1953-
would seem, to appeal to those of 1958) Lawrence Alloway and
his critics who limited their praises Eduardo Paolozzi were the driving
to the abstract-painter in him. force behind the \G (Independent
94
LUNDBERG
Group) which organized meetings Pop Art has moved a step closer to
and exhibitions ('Man Machine and Surrealism. On the other hand,
Motion' in 1955, 'This Is Tomor- Assemblagists like LathamJohn
row' in 1956) based on the relation- (b.l921),George Fullard (b.l924)
ship between art and technology. A and Bruce Lacey (b.l927), do not
second period (1958-1960) when appear to have any relationship
Richard Smith was the dominating with Pop Art which must be
personality corresponded to the counted the most important art
American contribution, both from movement in Great Britain during
the angle of popular culture and the present century.
that of the New Abstraction. Final-
ly, the third phase (1961-1965) was Lundberg, Lars-Gosta (Malmo,
chiefly animated by artists from the Sweden, 1938). Pop Art 2. With all
Royal College of Art and charac- the moralist's zest, Lundberg ex-
terized by stylistic eclecticism, due ploits the vocabulary of Pop to
to the influence of R. B. Kitaj. denounce all the pettiness of every-
Magda Cordell and John McHale day life and the great iniquities that
for the first period, Robyn Denny disturb the international consci-
(b.l930), Tony Gifford, William ence. And his sincerity, dispensing
Green and Ralph Rumney for the with words, often enables him to
second, Jonathan Hague, Peter achieve real poetry.
Miller, Henry Mundy (b.l919),
Patrick Proktor, Jon Thompson
and Norman Toynton for the
third, were among the artists who
participated in this adventure. But
the real representatives of British
Pop Art are first and foremost,
Peter Blake, and David Hamilton,
then Derek Boshier, Patrick Caul-
field, Anthony Donaldson, David
Hockney, Allen Jones, Gerald
Laing, Peter PhilHps and Joe Til-
son. More recently it would seem
that with artists such as Ivor Ab-
rahams (b.l935). Clive Barker,
Mark Boyle, Michael John David-
son (b.l939), David Giles (b.l936),
Nicholas Munro (b. 1936), David
Oxtoby (b.l938), Robin Page
(b.l932) Paul Roberts (b.l949),
Colin Self (b.l941), Wojiech Siud-
mak and Penelope Slinger, British
Maglione, Milvia (Bari, Italy, ton, Pol Mara - both within and
1936). Pop Art 2. In 1964 white outside himself - hunts down the
silhouettes of cherished beings and most devastating effects of
objects, a sign of the absence of or feminine seduction, multiplied by
yearning for the lost paradise of the arsenal of mass media. Vainly
childhood, invaded MagHone's pic- he strives to stanch these effects. In
tures. They were soon joined by vain he paints to conjure them, but
gentle clouds, the ribbon of the nothing can prevent this seduction
rainbow, the harvest of leaves, the from exercising itself and inspiring
rhythmic pulsations of the tides, dehghtfully, ineluctably, Pol
until they added up to the perfect Mara's painting, the perverse mir-
vocabulary of Divine favour. ror of the eternal temptress.
dilection for fluid and translucent and she found a particular outlet for
tones, remind us of Richard Hamil- her exuberance in contemporary
98
MASS MEDIA
99
Mara. Paint your Flowers
with Pearls. 1974.
-
TS^.-,. t:<-
•-. -7 -TV .•
fc'ft^sf'ys^iE^ 2*vf
MEC ART
direct influence on the subject mat- crytogams - from the morel to the
ter as on the style ofPop Art in the lycoperdon by way of the clavaria -
strict sense. that he arrived at a style of a fined-
down Pop of great expressive vig-
Mec Art (Mechanical Art). This our, based on a line of uniform
term was coined by Pierre Restany thickness and a restrained but effec-
in 1965 to designate a radically new tive use of colour which linked him
use of the photographic transfer. In closer to Krushenick than to Lich-
point of fact, Serge Béguier tenstein.
(b.l934), Gianni Bertini, Eric
Beynon, Samuel Buri, Pol Bury Melchert, James (New Bremen,
(b.l922), Alain Jacquet, Yehuda Ohio, 1930). After he had made his
Neiman (b.l931), Nikos (b.l930) mark on Funk Art with hermetic
and Mimmo Rotella frequently and obscene ceramics, poetic, mul-
used the process to distort the ticoloured, James Melchert turned
photographic image and not, like his attention to inventing mysteri-
Warhol and Rauschenberg, to ous games in which he makes great
show their respect for it. use of ready-mades or semblances
of them. In this way he developed a
Meister, Jean-Marie (Bienne, highly individual language in his
Switzerland, 1933). Pop Art 2. Like approach to Pop Art and his daily
Ivan Messac produced an effective chose the ear: the ear chose me.'
dialectic of image and colour which Solitary, large or small, repeated
not only serves visual eloquence hundredfold, cast in metal or plas-
but brings a moral and critical tic, sometimes painted on glass, the
'
io6
New York. Rosenquist. Blue Feet (Look alive!). 1%1.
Galerie Ileana Sonnabend, Paris.
Antonakos before his neon period. etic approach, at once between the
On the other hand, Joen Brainard individual artists and the inner feel-
(b.l942), Rosalyn Drexler, Stephen ings of the individual artists them-
Durkee (b.l939), Sante Graziani selves. The pioneers, Ben (b.l935)
Red Grooms, Leo Jensen,
(b.l920), and Yves Klein, ease the transition,
Yayoi Kusama, Richard Lindner the former at the start of Assemb-
and the 'Doom Artists' maintained lagism, the latter of Lyrical Ab-
only casual relations with Pop Art. straction, in their trend towards the
Kendall Shaw (b.l924), Robert Art of Comportment in which the
Stanley (b.l932) and Bert Stern artistic 'thing' becomes
matter of
a
(b.l929), on the other hand, the individuality alone.
artist's
specialized in a sophisticated form Arman, Rayse, Malaval, Gilli and
of the photographic image. The Flexner preserve their faith in the
realist wing of Pop Art presents autonomous work of art without
aesthetic solutions as widely diffe- however deciding between its poe-
rent as those of George Deem tic attractions and its formal
(b.l932), Alex Katz (b.l926), Kurt charms.
Kay (b.l944), Raoul Middleman
(b.l935) and Paul Thek (b. 1933), Noble t, Jocelyn de (Paris, 1936).
a kind of morbid hyperrealist. For Pop Art 2. Noblet composes Pop
its part, the abstract wing of Pop objects of rare elegance, very 'haute
Art is or was the concern of couture' with the most consum-
Krushenick, Irwin Fleminger, mate ease, but underneath this
Robert Mangold (b. 1937), Robert mask of 'good taste', however, we
Smithson (b.l938) and Richard can descry highly suspect inten-
Tuttle (b.l941). Finally, with their tions.
use of soft materials that Olden-
burg brought into fashion, several Nouveau Réalisme ('New
artists estabHshed a connection bet- Realism'). Founded
1960 by the
in
ween Pop Art and Poor Art, nota- critic Pierre Restany, Nouveau
bly Alice Adams (b.l930), Eva Réalisme claims to be founded on
Hesse (1936-1970), Jean Linder the 'acknowledgement of a
(b.l938), Robert Morris, Richard present-day nature', namely that of
Serra, Keith Sonnier (b.l941)and urban environment. All its mem-
Frank Lincoln Vmer (b.l937). But bers, those of the first phase:
we cannot altogether rid ourselves Arman, César, Dufrêne, Hains,
of the impression that the triumph Raysse, Spoerri, Tinguely, Villeglé
of Pop Art to all intents and pur- and those who joined them: Niki
poses exhausted the creative re- de Saint-Phalle in 1961, Christo
sources of the New York avant- and Gérard Deschamps in 1962, are
IÏ3
NUTT
§gr iri
114
Oldenburg. Giant Ghost Eltctnc Fan. 1%7. Sidney Janis Gallery, New Vork.
PAOLOZZI
* 'Cobra'. A Dutch
group which included Appel, Alenchinsky, Jorn and Corneille. The term is coined
from the names of three cities involved CO (Copenhagen), BR Brussels) A (Amsterdam) in the
movement. WJS.
ii8
Kapéra (b.l924), Maglione, Jac- Pascali, Pino (Bari, Italy, 1935-
ques Monory, Bernard Rancillac, Rome, 1968). Pop Art 2. The best
Jean-Michel Sanejouand, Daniel of Pino Pascali's fantastic work
Smerck. In 1965, their ranks were corresponds to a pursuit of child-
strengthened by the 'Objectors' hood dreams, entertained and per-
and some representatives of 'Mec petuated in particular by the strip
Art\ Between 1966 and 1968, cartoon; first in 1964 - cannons
Dufo, Hanlor, Joël Kermarrec, entirely remodelled in wood, then,
Jean-Marie Meister, Pavlos in 1966-1967, the fabulous evoca-
(b.l930), Jacques Poli, Sarkis tions of the whale, the giraffe, the
(b.l938), Costas Tsodis and Hugh dinosaur to the mygale. Finally, in
Weiss intervened in the debate in 1968, the monstrous caterpillar
have
their turn. Since then, others made of acrylic sponge.
taken an increasingly heterodox
Hne towards Pop orthodoxy; they Paschke, Ed (Chicago, 1939).
are Thierry Agullo, Bernard Ascal, Pop Art 2. an incisive style,
In
Babou, Véronique Bigo, Jacqueline aided by an acid and cruel colour-
Dauriac, Ruth Francken, Gérard ing, Ed Paschke has dedicated his
Fromanger, Gérard Guyomard, painting to the formulation of
Joël Hubaut, Le Boul'ch, Ivan 'emotive responses' to the most
Messac, Annette Messager, Francis brutal events as well as to the most
Meyrier, Bernard Moninot unusual careers - those of politi-
(b.l949), Jocelyn de Noblet, cians or also of those pariahs of
Rabascall, François Roux, Alain sociejty about whom
everything,
Tirouflet (b.l937) and Michel even their sex, is enigmatic.
Tyszblat. There is every indication
that the list is not yet closed. Pasotti, Silvio (Bergamo, Italy,
119
Pasotti. All that remained of
them was a grass imprint. 1973.
Quebec. Parent.
Red Sun. 1971-1972.
QUEBEC
verse, Poli seemed to reject lyri- was an instant and enormous suc-
cism, preferring nuts and bolts and cess. Although Pop Art and Pop
humble elements unlikely to evoke music developed side by side, there
flights of imagination but he failed has been no contact between them.
to stem the ever-increasing tide of
dominating machinery. Post-Pop Art. This term was
applied to late or bastard forms of
Pommereulle, Daniel (Paris, Pop Art by Michael Compton. It
1937). Pop Art 1. Daniel Pom- would be reasonable to reserve it
mereulle has practised assemblage rather for tendencies after Pop Art
(for example, a violet ball of wool and distinct from it but sharing the
attached to the foot of a blue same attachment to the notion of
garden-table) but more for magic the ready-made as in Conceptual
than aesthetic ends, and the pover- Art, Body Art, Land Art and Poor
ty of the means involved in a Art. In the latter, the ready-made is
somewhat theatrical manner only used to highlight mystical thought,
served to underHne their aim - the in Conceptual Art to serve pragma-
unforeseeable consequences which tic thought. In Body Art, the
can emerge from the combination ready-made is the human body. In
of very ordinary objects. Land Art nature is the ready-made.
The notion of ready-made allows
Pop Art (Popular Art - on the us then not only to describe what
analogy of Pop Music). This expres- Pop Art is but what it is not, since
sion originally coined in 1955 by it is self-evident that neither God,
Reyner Bahnham and Leslie Fiedler nor concepts, nor the body, nor
was then employed to designate the nature are Pop 'things'.
ensemble of forms assumed by
modern popular culture as rep- Publicity. By concentrating the
resented by the mass media. It was spectator's attention on the nature,
only several years later that it was properties and make of a product,
applied to the artists who were advertising art has played an indis-
inspired, first in England, then in pensable role in Pop Art, teaching
the United States where it was it to simphfy the image, faciHtate
established in 1963 - by this popu- its legibility and increase its impact.
lar culture. The present work
makes the differentiation between Quebec. In Quebec Pop Art
Pop Art 1, or Assemblagist Pop seems to have been accepted in its
Art and Pop Art 2 or Pop Art totality, albeit with a certain re-
proper. straint, doubtless because of the
Anglo-Saxon origins of its most
Pop Music (Popular Music, term celebrated representatives. Never-
recognized since 1962). It was a theless, it had inspired a great
follow-up of Rock and Roll, but number of Quebec artists, includ-
less aggressive and it has benefited ing a veteran like Albert
from the latest electro-acoustic Dumouchel in some
of his later
music. Pop Music first appeared in works. In the field of painting it
the U.K. and U.S. A in 1960 and sometimes became involved with
12^
RABASCALL
the intimist and nostalgic vein of a suggesting hidden thoughts.
Michèle Bastin or Antoine Dumas,
but for most of the time it nurtured Ramos, Mel (Sacramento,
a modern and wilfully critical cur- California, 1935). Pop Art 2. In
rent in the centre of which, apart 1966 the famous comic-strip hero.
from Edmund Alleyn and Murielle Batman, visited an exhibition of
Parent, are such distinguished con- paintings where the works had a
tributors as Pierre Ayot, Louise strange resemblance to those by
Lanaro, Serge Lemonde and Guy Mel Ramos. It was merely a well-
Montpetit. We find a more dis- deserved tribute on the part of the
tinctly erotic dimension in Gilles 'comic' to the artist who, in 1962-
Boisvert and Robert Wolfe. From 1963, had celebrated the famous
the glazed boxes of Alan Glass to star in a whole series of canvases.
the objects of Denys Morrisset and These, executed in an oleaginous
the Assemblages of Serge Cour- paint in which we can detect
noyer, freedom and fantasy claim Wayne Thiebaud's influence, are
their place, and we find the same further characterized by their crude
elements in the polychromatic colours, the violence of their com-
sculptures of Claire Hogenkamp position and certain subtle distor-
and the giant hinges of Maurice tions in the drawing. However,
Bergeron. But it was the graphic Mel Ramos, having dealt with the
arts in Quebec that profited from famihar strip-cartoon figures, set
the Pop aesthetic most, as we see in about creating new ones, perfectly
the case of the famous GRAFF plausible, moreover, as far as
group. Other artists who distin- heroines were concerned. In this
guished themselves in the same artist, Pop Art no longer stuck to
126
RAUSCHENBERG
tist was inaugurating a critical at- 1974, he would seem to have ar-
titude which, although subsequent- rived at the most satisfactory equa-
ly adopting new forms, never flag- tion between enthusiasm and vir-
ged at any time. In 1966 Rancillac tuosity that found expression in
abandoned the devastating and dazzling pyrotechnics and gem-like
anarchical accents of his first Pop briUiance.
period to devote his attention to a
rigorous and yet wholly personal Rauschenberg, Robert (Port
and deliberate transposition of Arthur, Texas, 1925). Pop Art 1.
photographic documents, almost Rauschenburg has never ceased to
invariably borrowed from the pre- show his deep commitment to the
vailing poHtical (Cuba,
situation Abstract Expressionism which he,
Mao's China, the Vietnam war, more than any other artist, worked
Palestinian resistence). It could to wreck - nor his dislike for Pop
127
RAUSCHENBERG
Art proper whose cause he had whilst escaping the Umitations at-
done so much to advance. Doubt- tributable to too much reflexion,
less, his attitude stems from the was to be translated not only in the
ambition he has so often pro- amazing series of combine-
claimed 'to work in the gap be- paintings which, from Charlene
tween life and art'. This aim is (1954) to Coexistence (1961) fol-
expressed very simply in his insis- lowed in succession, but in many
tence on combining in the work of of his other experiments. Thus, in
art painting as he understands it 1962, he adopted the technique of
(that is, freed from every figurative transferring photographs on to
obligation) with those hostages of canvas by silk-screen, an improve-
our everyday life which are rep- ment on the method of rubbings he
resented by
ordinary objects, had previously employed for the
cherished all the more because they same purpose, notably in his fam-
are not new but enjoy a past and a ous series of thirty-four combine-
history. In this sense, 'combine- drawings for Dante's Inferno (1959-
paintings' contains a moral as well 1960). By thesame token, he was
as an aesthetic meaning, since their one of the founders of the E.A.T.
aim is to reconcile man's spiritual in 1966, precisely because of his
and material activities. They con- conviction that technology should
stitute at once a criticism of Ab- not be left out of artistic creation.
stract Expressionism and Pop Art - His Tourniquets oi 1967, his Solstice
both equally guilty of concentrat- of 1968 like the Resonances of the
ing only on one aspect of things: Ludwig collection, show him in
the spiritual or the material aspect. pursuit of the same ends - thanks to
Rauschenberg's serious intention of the aids of technology - as in the
opening up himself and his work to combine-paintings,the combine-
all the rich diversity of reaHty drawings and the silk-screens on
If
with Pop Art to purely formal sometimes far too casual, is his
affinities. shattering ingenuity - so excep-
tional in a country with such a long
Raysse, Martial (Golfe Juan,
Alpes Maritimes, 1936). Pop Art 1
and 2. In 1960 in a work Hke
Hygene of Vision which takes its
prejudiced his considerable gifts of much more Pop than that of either
poetic creation. Jasper Johns or Rauschenberg, as
proved by his later subjects (Bar
Ready-Mades. 'Manufactured menu, Camel cigarette packets, photo-
objects promoted to the dignity of graphy of 'Life\ French hank-note,
objets d'art at the artist's choice' Dutch Masters and Cigars, etc.) Pic-
(Marcel Duchamp). torially he remains much more a
prisoner of the Abstract Expres-
Restany, Pierre (Amélie-les- sionist aesthetic than they are.
Bains, 1930). Art critic and founder Thus, the allusive vibration of his
of Nouveau Réalisme, convinced touch, his taste for sketchy forms
that easel-painting had had its day, and diffused colour have always
Restany insisted that, from the pre- prevented him from approaching
sent time on, the 'vision of things Pop orthodoxy, even when in so
should be inspired by the feeling of many ways, such as, for example,
modern nature which is that of the his plurality of information and
factory and the city, pubHcity and techniques, not to mention and
mass media, science and technolo- above all, perhaps, his interest in
gy.' And for fifteen years he has the coincidence of word and image,
fought unceasingly to impose he manifested specifically Pop Art
ideas, often controversial, and to obsessions.
win recognition for artists, now
famous, thanks to him.
Romagnoni, Bepi (Milan, 1930
Richter, Gerhard (Waltersdorf, — Villasimuis, 1964). Pop Art 2.
Germany, 1932). Pop Art 2. Ac- Romagnoni's contribution to Pop
cording to the situation, Gerhard Art was as brief as it was decisive.
Richter has been considered as ob- In 1961 he undertook to reintegrate
sessed in turn by female nudity, the dispersion of figurative ele-
opening doors, movement that dis- ments, as manifested in Rosenquist
torts bodies, celebrities etc. In reali- and Rauschenberg, in the midst of
131
GlIKVMUX
PllON!r
SOIJIICIL
^34
RUSCHA
tery is complete. This fact does not Roux, Francis (Nice, 1933). Pop
however diminish the fascination Art 2. Francis Roux uses Pop-art
exercised by Rosenquist's painting. techniques with the greatest free-
The artist's commentaries, always dom of spirit. This applies particu-
of interest, only go to confirm the larly to his 'Postcards to Charlotte'
functioning of the association of — amusing relief-paintings in-
images, without justifying the spired by various folklore tradi-
emergence of one object rather tions —
and of his confrontations
than another. Where else then with the three-dimensional object
should we look for the source of and its pictorial projection which
the extraordinary persuasive power are of considerable stylistic interest.
of his painting than in the artist's
deep sincerity. For, as we see, even
when Rosenquist uses the fantastic Ruscha, Edward (Omaha, Neb-
means observable in F 111 (1965), raska, 1937). Pop Art 2. Ruscha's
Forest Ranger (1967) and Flamingo work is perhaps the most discon-
Capsule (1970) he communicates certing in the whole of Pop Art.
his emotions directly, without re- Not because of its eccentricities but
sorting to description, in a visual its cool irony and the arbitrary
language of arresting and over- nature of its aesthetic options. In a
whelming freshness. series of canvases — several dealing
with garages, some flames —
in
Ruscha has systematically adopted
Rotella, Mimmo (Cantanzaro, the cinemascope format, further
Italy, 1918). Pop Art 1 and 2. In his accentuated by vertiginous obli-
'torn posters', the oldest of which ques. Another series shows in an
go back to 1951-1952, Rotella ad- expressive, sometimes humorous,
vanced in three successive stages: in sometimes detached manner,
the peeHng the poster off the
first, words in current use and proper
wall where it had been pasted, names, and in some cases, as-
next, re-sticking it on to his canvas, sociated with very ordinary ob-
and, finally, subjecting it to the jects. Finally, Ruscha has published
ultimate insults. As opposed to small books, each containing a set
Hains, Villeglé and Dufrêne, of photographs of the same kind of
Rotella is — at any rate in the series location: open-air swimming
called obsessed
'de Cinnecittà' — pools, car-parks, petrol stations
with the cinema-poster image, etc.
especially when it portrays stars
and starlets (1961-1962). These gay
and zestful works are followed by
photographic transfers on sen-
sitized canvas in 1963, then, more
recently, by the 'artypoplastics'
which are their perfected form and
in which Rotella makes a welcome
return to his more wayward, sen-
sual obsessions.
ï3^
Rosenquist. Forest Ranger, 1967. Collection Ludwig, Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne.
Rotella. Marilyn. 1963.
works on which viewers were in- postdate the emergence of Pop Art
vited to direct rifle fire and thereby proper in New York. On the con-
dig pockets of paint in the thickness trary, it came into being at precise-
of the Assemblage, represented the ly the same time. Furthermore and
most virulent criticism levelled above all, Peter Saul's work is a
against a certain kind of assemblag- brilliant proof that, starting out
ism sentimentality linked with Ab- from the same premises, namely
stract Expressionism. Thus, from mass-media popular culture, it was
1962 to 1965, Niki de Saint-Phalle possible to arrive at a radically
was to turn Assemblage in the different conclusion: an art likewise
direction of progressive Hberation nurtured on examples from strip-
from painting, with objects alone cartoons, publicity, illustrated
assuming the artist's subjectivity. magazines and television, but
Her later work, often hallucinatory which, instead of hobbling the
and of great poetic quaHty, was to ideologies of power and construct-
sever every connection with As- ing its aesthetic order on the social
semblage and Nouveau RéaHsme. and economic order, decided resol-
utely to declare its opposition, not
Samaras, Lucas (Kastoria, even by claiming to spread a politi-
Greece, 1936). Pop Art 1 A part of
.
cal message but simply by adopting
Samaras' work (boxes filled with the language and philosophy of the
pins, books filled with razor- man in the street, rather than that
blades, forks with bent prongs, of the technocrats of mass media.
chairs poetically diverted from Thus it is no mere chance that Peter
their normal function) can be con- Saul finds his inspiration as much
sidered as an obvious perversion of from graffiti as from comics, and
Pop Art and, consequently, as a that, as a result, his painting is
drawing cum collage and the sculp- theless, that people in white masks
tural joke (e.g. his five-metre high probably owed their existence and
Chair) on the depressing Environ- their status to Segal's own deep
ment and also the Fluxus concerts, inhibitions. Thus he has deliberate-
the theatre, TV and design which ly executed many representations
he likewise proceeded to turn up- of erotic, heterosexual, homosexu-
side down. al or incestuous scenes (the legend
of Lot)which thanks to him and his
Segal, George (New York, 1924). technique are marvels of delicacy
Pop Art 1 and 2. Segal's work and feeling.
stands on the point of balance be-
tween Assemblagism and Happen- Segui, Antonio (Cordoba,
ings on the one hand and Pop Art Argentina, 1934). Pop Art 2. The
on the other. This explains why it bitter humour' to use Max Clarac-
has been annexed and rejected in Sérou's expression, with which
turn by the theorists of the latter Segui was to assimilate David
movement. Segal has contributed Hockney's lesson in 1963, exercised
two types of ready-mades: moulds a great influence on a whole sector
from Hve models and with the aid of the Paris avant-garde.
of real objects (chair, table, bed,
ladder, bath, dentist's chair, au- Smerck, Daniel (Paris, 1937).
thentic works of art, luminous Pop Art In almost complete
2.
signs, etc.), the suggestion of 'En- secrecy Daniel Smerck evolved be-
139
Ruscha. Large Sign with eight Projectors, 1%2.
Statnpfli. Caprice.
1%8.
Saul. Poverty. 1969. C.N.A.C., Paris.
SMITH
tween 1964 and 1965 a Pop paint- Snow, Michael (Toronto, Cana-
ing of irreproachable plastic quali- da, 1929). Pop Art 2. Painter,
ty, now anxious to find order with- sculptor, scenario-writer, jazz
in a narrative structure, now, con- musician, Michael Snow has been
versely, faithful to the eloquence of the essential Hnk between the New
a image, but deeply and
single York and Canadian avant-garde.
permanently impregnated with a Prophet of Pop Art, he has, since
kind of restlessness for something 1960, elaborated the theme of the
beyond. 'walking woman' in countless
ways, but finally in a rhythmic
Smith, Richard (Letchworth, rather than sensual spirit.
142
STAMPFLI
* 'Nouveau Roman'. The term applied to a somewhat heterogeneous group of French authors - Robbc-
Grillet, Michel Butor and Nathalie Sarraute whose significant novels emerged in the Fifties. Common to
the latter is the technique which (like a Happening) shows the creative process in action. In the work of
the first two 'objects' play an important role, eg La Jalousie (Robbe-Gnllet) and La Modification (Butor).
WJS.
^4'
STANKIEWICZ
which the 'subjects' are mere pre- Stankiewicz was one of the first
texts? Not so, for in Stampfli's in the early 'fifties to put indust-
painting we find an almost unbear- rial junk to sculptural purposes.
able seriousness, further amplified His work, marked by an an-
by their large dimensions and thropomorphic conception of
which would be incompatible with unusually persuasive power, was
an art solely concerned with plastic not without its influence on Tin-
organization. It would seem then guely.
that weshould consider this paint-
ing as a kind of warning, the more Strider, Marjorie (United
dramatic in that we are unaware Pop Art 2. From a wo-
States).
against what or whom it invites us man's breasts to clouds, via flowers
with such insistence to be on our and tomatoes, images of fecundity
guard. have exercised such a fascination on
SZAPOCZNIKOW
Marjorie Strider as to have im- for tapestry, are doubtless the most
posed a veritable pictorial obstet- remarkable placed in this situation.
rics on her works which reached To a lesser degree, it is also true of
their climax with Red Diagonal Dick Bengtsson, Olla Billgren
(1964) and View from a Window (b.l940), Bengt Bockman
(1965). By projecting the luminous (b.l936), Roj Friberg (b.l934),
outhne of the windows on the Gerhard Nordstrom (b.l925), Bar-
roundness of the clouds, she was bro Ostlihn (b.l930) and John
not content to reverse the problem Wipp (b.l927).
of the relation of the canvas to three
dimensions in dialectical terms, but Switzerland. Apart from
provided the link that separated Daniel Spoerri and Jean Tmguley,
Magritte from Man Ray on the one Switzerland has contributed many
hand and Oldenburg and doubtless Assemblagists such as Jurgen
Rosenquist on the other, or be- Brodwolf Edy Brunner
(b.l932),
tween SurreaHsm and Pop Art. A (b.l943), Burner (b.l923),
Jean
subversive role which she con- Franz Eggenschwiler (b.l930),
tinued to sustain more recently in Alby Moesch and above all Dieter
her version of a ball entering water Rot (b.l930). In the field of Pop
- water that is perfectly solid. Art proper the most distmguished
painters are Samuel Burri, Jean
Sweden. In the first place Sweden Lecoulbe (b.l930) and Peter
provided Pop Art with a whole Stampfli. We should however
luxury of heterodox positions equally consider the contribution
which go from
Carl Fredrik of a host of other artists, among
Reutersward (b. 1934), an authen- whom we should mention Eric
tic Dadaist surgeon whose jokes Beynon, Sandro Bocola, Franz
would have delighted a Picabia, to Gertsch (b.l930), Alfred Hofkunst
Endre Nemes (b.l909) who pro- (b.l942), Fred Knecht (b.l934),
vides kind of fusion between
a Rosina Kuhn (b.l940), Paul
Surrealism and the spirit of Pop by Lehmann (b.l924). Max Matter
way of the comic Assemblages of (b.l941), Thomas Mislm (b.l936),
Per Olof Ultvedt (b.l927), and Hugo Schuhmacher (b.l939),
especially the strange interroga- Giancarlo Tamagni (b.l940), Peter
tions ofOyvind Fahlstrom. Furth- Travaglini, Marianne Wydler
ermore, Pop Art proper seems to (b.l939) and Jurgen Zumbrunnen
have produced above all a critical (b.l946).
kind of painting, sometimes con-
cerned with the evolution of be- Szapocznikow, Alina (Kalisz,
haviour, sometimes with political Poland, 1926-Paris 1973). The Hps,
problems. Gert Aspehn (b.l944), breast and buttocks which Alina
Marie-Louise De Geer, Olle Kaks Szapocznikow cast from 1965 in
(b.l941), C. Goran Karlsson translucent and variously coloured
(b.l944), Lars-Gosta Lundbcrg plastics allowed her to compose a
among the painters. Par Gunnar whole familiar décor and - in par-
Thelander (b.l936), for engraving ticular a luminous one - in honour
and Helena Barynina Hernmarck of the female body. Her last works
•4^
TACCHI
ery as, for example, the speech- would Hke to be a kind of gauge of
balloons of strip-cartoons, Cesare paradoxical objects', states Télé-
Tacchi with the aid of printed fab- maque. What he means by
rics has not only produced very 'paradoxical objects' are, for ex-
diverting works but has certainly ample, the walking-stick, whistle,
contributed a kind of poetic exten- corset, tent, which suggest con-
sion to Pop techniques. tradictory actions (walking and the
difficulty of walking, noise and
Tadini, Emilio (Milan, 1927). silence, desire and its prohibition,
Pop Art 2. Like that of Adami and the security and precariousness of
Del Pezzo, Tadini's work shares in home). For with Télémaque ob-
a somewhat aberrant enterprise - to jects are submitted to a kind of
the extent that, with the rise of Pop distrustful interrogation. 'How far
Art and partly in reaction to the can one have confidence in them?'
excesses of so-called 'Art brut' the painter seems to ask, confi-
(Raw Art'), it aimed
developing at dence in their practical as well as
de Chirico's Metaphysical Paint- symbolic trustworthiness? Thus,
ing towards a total rationaHzation hardly has he admitted that such an
of pictorial creation. Restraint in object truly possesses a precise vir-
composition and clarity of form, tue than he becomes anxious to
however, were never with de know whether this object does not
Chirico, at his zenith, the product equally offer the opposite virtue.
of a previous calculation but of a Once suspicion is introduced into
rare kind of trance. Nevertheless, the mechanism of the association of
Tadini's paintings - outcome of ideas and images, Télémaque had
this disputable theory and kinds of no other option than to elaborate a
intellectual jigsaws, - sometimes, kind of empiric symbolism, equal-
by virtue of their very doctrinaire ly distanced from practical experi-
severity, attain a kind of stifling ence and Freudian symbology,
poetry, so rarefied is the air, so both no less suspect in his eyes.
pitiless their beauty. Aesthetically, tfiis mistrust is ren-
146
lllliiBAlU)
Thiebaud. Window
Cakes. 1%3.
Collection Harry N.
Abrams, New York.
•47
TILSON
1\
/ / /
'i^'^ITTTrfrV
I 50
VOSTELL
Usami, Keiji (Osaka, 1940). Pop Voss, Jan (Hamburg, 1936). Pop
Art 2. From a photograph of the Art 1965 Jan Voss, in succes-
2. In
race riots at Watts near Los Angeles sive stages, abandoned the frame
in 1965, Usami chose four silhouet- and text of the strip-cartoon in
tes of Blacks which he systemati- favour of a dispersion of images on
cally analysed and combined in the surface of the canvas which
graphic and colour work from 1967 allows of much more freedom in
to 1972, utilizing laser-beams as space and time relationships. The
well as painting. The results of this new preoccupation was rather with
exacting enterprise, situated on one those hypothetical treasure islands
of the frontiers of Pop Art, are of which have set so many genera-
very real beauty. dreaming and on
tions of children
which various picturesque figura-
tions replaced traditional map re-
Villeglé, Jacques Mahé de la ferences. Jan Voss's paintings also
(Quimper, 1926). Pop Art 1. Of all abound in adventures, everyday
the 'poster-lacerators' Villeglé is and fantastic, and if they lead us to
the one who has proved himself any kind of treasure it is that of
most obsessed with the ready- paradise regained.
made aspect of this activity. Thus,
it was his idea to give world-wide Vostell, Wolf (Leverskusen, Ger-
recognition to the anonymous many, 1932). Pop Art 1. 'Lacerated
poster-lacerator, the artist who posters', 'mix-ups' of photographs,
raises theproduct of laceration and scrambles of television transmis-
the successive manipulators of this sions. Happenings of every kind,
work, to the level of a 'work of 'concrete casts' of objects, maquet-
art', by his appellation 'anonymous tes of large cities have for Vostell
laceration'. At the same time as he the common denominator 'dé-
showed a particularly revealing collage' ('torn poster'). In his eyes
concern with composition in his in fact, all these activities form part
designs of overlapping letters and of the same challenge thrown
images, he produced further proof down before the destructive forces
of his sensibility in his great refine- perpetually at work in the world
ment of colour. and owe their sole justification to
this challenge. It is this dramatic
Visual Poetry. Starting out dimension and also his overwhelm-
from the combination of two ele- ing sincerity which prevent Vostell
ments of the ready-made, illustra- from falling into the confusing agi-
tion (mostly photographic) and tation which a Joseph Bcuys seems
graffiti, visual poetry opened the to favour.
door to all the temptations of a
kind of childish Pop Art. Almost
alone, jean François Bory (b.l938)
avoided such allurements and de-
veloped original and lyrical work
in two and three dimensions with a
humour not devoid of discipline.
15»
Warhol. CampbeWs Soup Can. 1965. Leo Castelli Gallery, New York.
Weiss. Orestes again. 1974.
Wesselmann.
'Chamber-paintinç* 14.
1%9.
WAR HOI.
magazine. He then sends this to a 1963, and ever since they have
silk-screen studio to have it en- occupied an increasing importance
larged by that medium to the de- in his output — to the detriment of
sired format so that finally when his painting activities. Apart from
the frame is returned to him with Warhol's choice of an image,
initial
the silk-screen transfer, he can de- his intervention is almost nil (mere-
cide where the colours are to go. ly the decisions relating to format
All that then remains is to have as and colour) in the genesis of the
many prints made as the painter work of art. It is readily under-
wants. Warhol is satisfied to leave standable that such a procedure,
the task of the final operation to unprecedented in the art world, has
M4
WATTS
the thirteen Most Wanted Men (for way of life' on Warhol's part would
'theft', 'murder', 'automobile acci- be, to say the least, hazardous. It
dents', 'race riots', 'air disasters', would seem, on the contrary, that
'electric chairs') and also the picture Warhol, perfectly conscious of the
extracted from a vampire film with deadly significance of his work,
Bela Lugosi. In 1964 came the behaves neither as a moralist nor a
'Flowers' series, the images of the prophet but as a child terrified by
young widow, Jackie Kennedy, what he has discovered in everyday
The Kennedy Family, Brillo pads, images and is prepared by every
— the latter executed mostly in available means to exorcise in —
three-dimensions, the size of the and through these images death —
originals. To all of which we have and its sinister attendants.
in 1965 the mere addition of
(atomic) 'explosions' and the por- Watts, Robert (Burlington,
trait of Marlon Brando. In 1966 we Iowa, 1929). Pop Art
and 2.1
body and the outer world. And is no accident that in the admirable
around the nude or the painting, series of Bedroom Paintings inaugu-
this exterior world passes succes- rated in 1967 and of such 'retro'
sively through the following charm, the things that surround the
phases: first, represented by two- woman's body and Wesselmann
dimensional photo-collage, then has painted with such affection are
three-dimensional collage of real cushions, furs, jewels, oranges,
objects, before being - for a brief ash-trays and roses.
period - totally eHminated, and,
finally, as has now been the case for Westermann, H. C. (Los
some years, translated in pictorial Angeles, CaHfornia, 1922).
terms. In this succession of diffe- Through and expressly
his poetic
rent solutions, we
could be justifi- Assemblage, Wes-
irrational use of
ably tempted to read the vagaries of a termann has exercised a profound
unique conflict between the picto- influence, not only in Chicago
rial tradition and the burden of the where he long resided, but in
modern world. There is another California and even on Claes Old-
reason which should not escape our enburg whom he doubtless encour-
attention, however tenuous the aged to lend an attentive ear to his
link that can be made between him own phantasms.
and the other Pop artists. It is this:
as opposed to the latter, Wessel- Whitman, Robert (New York,
mann - and he makes no attempt to 1935). Pop Art 1. Associated with
hide the fact - has no desire to paint the Happening movement from the
products of consumer society. start (The American Moon, 1960)
What he really likes to paint are Robert Whitman has since made
female nudes, whole or part: feet, his mark through his Environ-
breasts, lips or even the smoke ments composed of curtains, mir-
exhaled from lush lips like a confes- rors, TV-screens or windows on to
sion. Thus, by a process of elimina- which films are projected showing
tion, leaving only the space round women absorbed in various occu-
this body so passionately celeb- pations, intimate or not - as the
rated, Wesselmann, between 1965 case may be.
158
Zr.BKA
M9
Acknowledgements
Our thanks are due not only to the artists themselves for their
valuable co-operation but also, and especially, to the following:
Umberto Allemandi, Jun Ebara, Otto Hahn, Ragnar von
Holten, Yolande Lefèvre, Jocelyn de Noblet, Danièle Ouzilou,
Pierre Restany, Pâquerette Villeneuve, the Phyllis Kind Gallery
of Chicago and, in Paris, the follow^ing galleries - Bellechasse,
MathiasPels, Y von Lambert, des Quatre Mouvements, Ileana
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i An Illustrated Dictionary of
£3 POPART
José Pierre