View all items from The Curated Collection of Kenneth & Barbara Hammel; Lancaster, Pennsylvania sale

Roy Lichtenstein Linocut with Silkscreen "Mirror #3," 1972

Item Details

Roy Lichtenstein (1923-1997)
Mirror #3, 1972
Color linocut with silkscreen on Arjormari paper
Signed to lower right
Editioned 62 / 80 to lower right
Dated to lower right
Printed and published by Gemini, G.E.L., Los Angeles with blind stamp
Provenance: ex Demuth, lot #49, 11/7/1997; exhibited Lancaster Museum of Art, 2014 as part of their “PoP” exhibition.

Roy Lichtenstein developed his signature Pop art style by merging high-art formalism with material culture. Although he had studied art from an early age, it was not until his late thirties that he began experimenting with cartoon images from comic books, advertisements, and other popular imagery. These works varied from abstract to figurative as he continued to develop his own visual vocabulary, for which he quickly became famous. Several key elements make a work by Lichtenstein instantly recognizable: blown up images taken either directly from or inspired by comic strips or newspaper ads; the use of primary colors; and ben-day dots, creating uniform color areas organized by definitive black outlines. It was important to Lichtenstein that the viewer not see evidence of gesture or the artist’s hand in his artistic process, although the seemingly mechanical style and lowbrow subject matter led some to dismiss his work; in 1964, Life published an article entitled “Is He the Worst Artist in the U.S.?” Over time, it became easier to recognize that Lichtenstein’s imagery is both ironic and witty, and that his compositions were masterfully orchestrated.

Condition

- frame is separating at corners.

Dimensions

28.5" W x 28.5" H x 1.25" D

- measurement of frame; visible image measures approximately 28" W x 27.75" H.

Item #

ITMGJ05491

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