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BeyondGeography

(39,374 posts)
Sat Apr 1, 2017, 04:07 PM Apr 2017

James Rosenquist, Pop Art Pioneer, Dies at 83

Source: NY Times

James Rosenquist, who helped define Pop Art in its 1960s heyday with his boldly scaled painted montages of commercial imagery, died on Friday in New York City. He was 83 years old.

...Like his contemporaries Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, Mr. Rosenquist developed a powerful graphic style in the early 1960s that traditionalists reviled and a broad public enthusiastically embraced.
The Pop artists took for their subject matter images and objects from the mass media and popular culture, including advertising, comic books and consumer products. They also employed techniques that until then had been associated primarily with commercial and industrial methods of production, like silk screening or, in Mr. Rosenquist’s case, billboard painting.

Mr. Rosenquist himself drew on his experience painting immense movie billboards above Times Square and a Hebrew National sign in Brooklyn. It was while working in New York as a sign painter by day and an abstract painter by night that he had the idea to import the giant-scale, broadly painted representational pictures from outdoor advertising into the realm of fine art.

...Mr. Rosenquist’s paintings rarely contained overt political messages, but his best-known work, the enormous "F-111," was made in 1964 and 1965 in part as a protest against American militarism. In it, the image of a modern fighter plane stretching 86 feet across a grid of 51 canvas and aluminum panels is interrupted by images of a colossal tire, a beach umbrella, a mushroom cloud, spaghetti and tomato sauce, and a little girl under a chrome hair dryer that resembles a warhead.

Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/01/arts/james-rosenquist-dead-pop-art.html?smprod=nytcore-ipad&smid=nytcore-ipad-share



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James Rosenquist, Pop Art Pioneer, Dies at 83 (Original Post) BeyondGeography Apr 2017 OP
RIP. He lost a lot of his work in a fire maybe 10 years ago. I knew his ex-wife very well KittyWampus Apr 2017 #1
Yeah, that had to have been devastating. progressoid Apr 2017 #5
Rest in peace shenmue Apr 2017 #2
*sigh* It seems all my heroes are dying lately. Coventina Apr 2017 #3
RIP burrowowl Apr 2017 #4
 

KittyWampus

(55,894 posts)
1. RIP. He lost a lot of his work in a fire maybe 10 years ago. I knew his ex-wife very well
Sat Apr 1, 2017, 04:35 PM
Apr 2017

She has some of his work from early years to mature years which are recognizable as his work.

I only liked the few early works he did. One was a nice little watercolor of his family on the beach. Nothing like what he's known for.

But he did have a distinct talent and unique vision and his drive to succeed in the art world paid off for him.

It's not easy to do well in the art world or to earn other artists' respect and he got both.


progressoid

(49,990 posts)
5. Yeah, that had to have been devastating.
Mon Apr 3, 2017, 08:25 AM
Apr 2017
After losing home, studios in wildfire, painter Rosenquist faces uncertain future

By Joel Anderson, Times Staff Writer
Sunday, April 26, 2009 10:49pm


"Everyone who thinks we should keep going," longtime assistant Beverly Coe asked Sunday, "raise their hands."

The six staff members eagerly lifted their hands. But renowned artist James Rosenquist kept one hand around a glass of pale lager and the other on his paint-spattered white jeans.

"We had a lot done already," Rosenquist said, settling deeply into a black leather couch. "I'm trying to decide whether to get going or not."

One of the world's most famous painters, the 75-year-old Rosenquist faces an uncertain future after a brush fire swept through his home, office and studio Saturday. A second home also was lost, officials said. No one was injured.

"It's all gone," Rosenquist said. "I'm just wiped out."


http://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/fire/after-losing-home-studios-in-wildfire-painter-rosenquist-faces-uncertain/995632
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