Categories
Events,
Galleries | Art,
Movies | Film
Pop Goes the Easel explores Pop Art of the 1960s and its impact on painting, printmaking, and sculpture in the decades that followed.These artists chose banal subjects such as soup cans, cows, race cars, and pin-up girls; they appropriated the look of advertising, commercial art, and comic strips; and they adopted commercial techniques such as stenciling and silk screening.
By exploding traditional notions of easel painting, Pop artists of the 1960s radically expanded the possibilities of how art is made and how it is viewed. Pop Art and its Progeny explores the social and political avenues opened up by Pop for more recent American artists as well as for those working on the global stage. This exhibition shows how Pop Art freed later artists to pursue new directions and to broaden their perception—and our understanding—of the world around us.
Add to your experience of the exhibit by attending the film screening of "Andy Warhol's Films," a compilation introduced by Ross Morin a professor of film studies at Connecticut College.
For Reservations call 860.443.2545 x129 Members $5; Non-Members $10
Connecticut College students are Free
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