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Still, even I am surprised at the massive difference between the sale of these two pieces of art. "I Can See The Whole Room!… And There's Nobody In It!" by Roy Lichtenstein, selling for $43,202,500.
When you hear the name Roy Lichtenstein, an artistic style immediately comes to mind. In the early 1960s, Lichtenstein’s use of comic books as an inspiration for his brightly-colored Pop Art ...
In 1993, a blockbuster Lichtenstein retrospective at the Guggenheim, some 200 pieces strong, sealed the painter's reputation as a prime instigator of Pop art. This week, another major Lichtenstein ...
But in a tour of Roy Lichtenstein: History in the Making, 1948–1960, the Nasher Museum of Art’s Marshall N. Price (who curated the exhibit with Elizabeth Finch, of Maine’s Colby College ...
Drowning Girl, an exemplary piece symbolic of the Pop Art movement, holds a prominent place in Roy Lichtenstein’s oeuvre. Acquired by New York’s Museum of Modern Art in 1971, this 1963 ...
Roy Lichtenstein’s pop-art take on Eve hides some deep theology. It was all her fault? #sorrynotsorry. ... Eve’s purported responsibility for original sin is also an origin story for misogyny.
Staff members at Selby Botanical Gardens admit they may have gotten carried away with inspiration while designing their latest art-meets-nature exhibition “Roy Lichtenstein: Monet’s Garden ...
The two sessions will offer 346 lots, featuring works by icons of 20th century art, including Andy Warhol, Yves Klein, Keith Haring, Roy Lichtenstein, and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner.
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