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Hear Roy Lichtenstein discuss a major change in his style, particularly his adoption of dot patterns, during his early Pop period


Hear Roy Lichtenstein discuss a major change in his style, particularly his adoption of dot patterns, during his early Pop period
Hear Roy Lichtenstein discuss a major change in his style, particularly his adoption of dot patterns, during his early Pop period
Learn from artist Roy Lichtenstein about his stylistic development during his early Pop period (1961–66), from the documentary The Drawings of Roy Lichtenstein (1987).
Checkerboard Film Foundation (A Britannica Publishing Partner)

Transcript

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ROY LICHTENSTEIN: In '61 my work changed dramatically, I guess. I was doing sort of Abstract Expressionist paintings that had the figure of Donald Duck in it. Somehow it occurred to me to do the cartoon straight, without the artistic accoutrement of the expressionist style. The cartoon seems to have everything I need to make a modern drawing. It's a symbol of the modern age. And that, of course, made a huge change in the style of my work. Yeah, the couch is undoubtedly taken from the newspaper ad for a couch. And it's so mechanical and unsympathetic, I couldn't resist drawing that. Well, the first dots I made were in the first Pop painting I made, the one called "Look Mickey," and the dots were made by a plastic dog brush. And I just dipped it in paint and put it on the canvas so they made a sort of regular dot pattern.

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