Brushstrokes

Name/Title

Brushstrokes

Entry/Object ID

1974.35

Tags

Westwood deinstall Fall 2023

Description

Abstracted brushstrokes in white, red, and yellow on a background of blue dots.

Type of Print

Serigraph

Artwork Details

Medium

Paper, ink

Made/Created

Artist

Roy Lichtenstein

Date made

1967

Edition

Edition

Brushstrokes

Edition Size

300

Edition Number

259

Notes

signed lower right

Inscription/Signature/Marks

Type

Signature, Print number and run

Location

lower right

Transcription

Lichtenstein 259/300

Material/Technique

In Artist's Hand, Pencil

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Secondary Object Term

Print, Screen

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Print

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Graphic Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Dimensions

Dimension Description

Sheet

Height

23 in

Width

38 in

Dimension Description

Image

Height

21-7/8 in

Width

30-7/8 in

Exhibition

Wunderkammer: Introduction to Curatorial Practices Class Fall 2024 (2025)

Interpretative Labels

Label Type

Cultural/Historical Context

Label

"Along with fellow Pop artists Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist, Red Grooms, Claus Oldenburg and others Lichtenstein defined and dominated the American an scene during the early and mid 1960s. In his works, Lichtenstein chooses action-charged images which, in the early stages, he took from melodramatic color comic strips. His distinctive style, which utilizes enlarged Ben Day screen dots, makes the actual process of print reproduction into the subject matter of his work. His predominant color range -- black, red. yellow and blue -- also suggests commercialism by imitating printers ink colors. Strong black outlines around his images further the graphic, 'reproduced"" look of Lichtenstein‘s art. Toward the 1970's, Lichtenstein moved away from direct comic bunk imagery but still retained his crisp, cool and cartoon-like style. From his visual environment came his series on mirrors, entablatures, still-lifes, American Indian designs and brush strokes. Regarding his work, Lichtenstein says he is ""dealing with the images that have come about in the commercial world, because there are certain things about them which are impressive or bold….It's that quality of the images that I'm interested in. The kind of texture the dots make is usable to me in my work. But it's not saying that commercial art is terrible, or 'look what I've come to' -- that may be a sociological fact, but it is not what this art is about."""