consumption
Pop Art
Pop art (English pop-art, from popular art to public art) is a trend that took shape first in modern art and then in various spheres of popular culture of the 20th century.
Pop art originated in the 50s of the 20th century in the USA and Great Britain and finally won a “place under the sun” at the international exhibition in Venice (1964), defeating abstractionism. An American artist R. Rauschenberg received the main prize for “subject compilation” composed of combinations of colorful postcards and a scrap of a poster, clippings from illustrated magazines and a photograph of the assassinated President J. Kennedy. Continue reading
subject
landscape
utopia
currents
work
boudoirs
form
Elder
balance
Renaissance
children
color
quest
optics
installations
poison
existence
Artists
wisdom
breaks
cults
impression
tradition
neo-romantic
Titian
canvas
Venetian
neoclassicism
institution
European art
furniture
machine
consumption
Pissarro
Saissian period
culture
consequences
United States
geometric
genre
Gothic
aesthetization
paradoxical combinations
animals
language
Scarab
stimulates
Rococo
civilization
random
Milo
artist
nihilism
style
versions
penalty
deliberate
rational
era
countries
shadows
overdevelopment
characteristic
human
cubism
modernism
church