1. A Brief Lesson in the American
Artistic Movement;
Ceramics and Sculpture
2. n. A form of art that depicts
objects or scenes from
everyday life and employs
techniques of commercial art
and popular illustration.
pop-art (pŏp'ärt')
Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language, Fourth Edition
3. A visual art movement that emerged in the 1950s
and was popular in the 1960s in the United States.
Characterized by themes and techniques drawn
from popular mass culture, such as television,
movies, advertising and comic books.
Food was a common theme, but so were
household objects.
Pop artists liked to satirize or ridicule objects,
sometimes enlarging those objects to gigantic
proportions . These objects reflected mass culture
and consumerism.
The movement was marked by clear lines, sharp
paintwork and clear representations of symbols,
objects and people commonly found in popular
culture.
4. Andy Warhol Roy Lichtenstein Claes Oldenburg
Robert Rauschenberg Tom Wesselmann
5. Andy Warhol Andy Warhol
“Campbell’s Soup” “Sixteen Jackies”
1968 1964
10. And now for the subject matter we’ll
be focusing on…
11. Claes Oldneberg
• Claes Oldenburg (born January
28, 1929) is a Swedish American
sculptor, best known for his
public art installations typically
featuring very large replicas of
everyday objects. Another theme
in his work is soft sculpture
versions of everyday objects.
Many of his works were made in
collaboration with his wife,
Coosje van Bruggen, who died in
2009 after 32 years of marriage.
14. Subjects are often easily recognizable and reflect
popular items, people or ideas from American Culture:
Food
Brand Names and products
Iconic Figures
Common, everyday household items
Current events
Stylistically pop art can be defined as:
Simple, crisp lines
Oversized images or objects
Often reflects and copies the styles seen in the media
Collages of popular images
Bright Colors
Some work re-creates the same subject in
several pieces or within the same piece
15. Ceramics and Sculpture Pop Art Assignment
Objective: Create food still life
using techniques and themes
seen in work by artists like Claus
Oldenberg
Should be life size
Should attempt realism
Must be a CONTAINER (FUNCTIONAL)
You will need to:
Watch and respond to this PowerPoint
Bring in color pictures of food you
would like to sculpt
Create at least 3 preliminary sketches
before working
Determine when pinch, coil or slab
methods are needed.
Execute in clay
Paint not glaze (realistic colors) and seal.
33. Works Cited:
Slide 2 - Definition of Pop Art: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Pop Art
Slide 3- Information About Pop Art History:
http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/popart/
Slide 4- Photo of Andy Warhol:
http://www.poolparty.com/quotes/images/2007/09/24/andy_warhol.jpg
Photo of Roy Lichtenstein:
http://media.photobucket.com/image/Roy%20Lichtenstein%20portrait/tomasu
tpen/album4/lichtenstein.jpg
Photo of Claes Oldenburg:
http://s3.amazonaws.com/com.artwelove.asset/5f19ce303a0be2aa6ab3395d7dabbf
f4-l.jpg
Photo of Tom Wesselmann:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_KZujt_O1vU/SdybvAXCCPI/AAAAAAAAAGM/1Q2ih3zGuk
g/s400/Tom_Wesselmann.jpg
Slide 5- Andy Warhol Campbell Soup Painting:
http://yoyo.cc.monash.edu.au/~mplog/Art/Warhol_campbells%20soup.jpg
Andy Warhol Jackie Painting:
http://annespeelman.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/andywarhol-jackie-kennedy-
1964.jpg
34. Works Cited
Slide 6- Roy Lichtenstein Girl Painting:
http://baroqueinhackney.files.wordpress.com/2009/09/roy_lichtenstein_gallery
_4.jpg
Roy Lichtenstein Whaam Painting:
http://simplyartonline.net/M-0137v3wham.jpg
Slide 7- Photos of Roy Lichtenstein Sculpture: photo by Aja Alim-Young 2009, In front of
Modern Art Museum in Washington D.C.
Slide 8- Tom Wesselmann Mouth Piece:
http://www.findagrave.com/photos/2004/356/10164756_110373764570.jpg
Tom Wesselmann Still life:
http://media.photobucket.com/image/tom%20wesselmann/Death2Perky/24- l.jpg
Slide 9- Robert Raushchenberg Painting:
http://www.museumofthegulfcoast.org/images/rausch.jpg
Slide 10- Spoon and cherry Sculpture:
http://www.oldenburgvanbruggen.com/largescaleprojects/spoonbridge.htm
Ice Cream Cone Sculpture:
http://www.oldenburgvanbruggen.com/largescaleprojects/droppedcone.htm
Slide 11- Summary of key ideas by Aja Alim-Young, referred by
http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/popart/
Slide12- Line Art Examples:
http://www.staceytownsend.com/turnmeintopopart/images/home_quadimage.png
http://www.melissaclifton.com/image158.html
2D Pop Art Assignment: Created by Aja Alim-Young