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Gruenburg 1 Gretchen Gruenburg Muecke 1020 14 April, 2011 Pop Goes the Art World Art was typically reserved for the elite and highbrow categories until about the 1950’s. The ‘50’s in America symbolized hope, growth, advancement, and the quintessential “American Dream”. The world was still recovering from a major world war. The need for resources and goods was so high during the war, that after it ended, a huge boom in consumer goods occurred. Americans became obsessed with having or obtaining material things, products or goods. This obsession was extremely hard to escape; with the invention of the television, and the radio still very popular, advertisements were increasing and inescapable. By 1960, America had somewhat morphed into a different society; one of nice cars, a single-family home in the suburbs, and a Suzy-homemaker in every kitchen using the latest and greatest cleaning and cooking supplies for her household. This transition in the average American lifestyle did not go unnoticed in the art world. In fact, it also affected it by taking part in a major shift of postmodern art. This shift was both a reaction to and a commentary of the growing obsession with material goods in America. A trend in the art world began in America in the mid fifties and forever changed contemporary art. This trend encompassed commentary and possibly a criticism of the politics of that time, and the new American lifestyle: one centered on material goods, money and celebrities. Popular art was no longer intended specifically for Gruenburg 2 abstract expression of one’s own personal feelings, art morphed into a social commentary of the modern world. Using the very means of production as the subjects they were criticizing, some Pop artists even mass-produced their pieces, completely going against the former notion of making one-of-a-kind pieces. Displaying images of popular products, celebrities, politicians, and forms of communication and entertainment, the Pop art movement exposed the modern American lifestyle as obsessed with material objects and false idols. The most notable figure from the American Pop art scene is, without a doubt, Andy Warhol. Whether you’ve seen his images time and time again, know his memorable quotes or appearance, or have only simply heard his name once or twice, it’s likely most Americans know at least something about him. Warhol broke a barrier in the art world and became wildly famous in the New York art and music scene of the 60’s and 70’s. Due to his personal obsession with fame, Warhol’s art was the most obviously fame and material obsessed of all the key proponents of the Pop art movement. Some of Warhol’s most notable pieces include simple silk-screenings of Campbell’s Soup cans or Marilyn Monroe portraits. The journal Pop Art and Genre quotes Otto Hahn in response to a show of Warhol’s in Paris in May 1965, he says, “The true subject is not the flowers, or Marilyn Monroe, but the very process of erosion, the anonymity of an empty obsession, the mechanical flattening which ceaselessly repeats the same image emptied of all substance” (Bann 118) This statement exemplifies the meaning behind this art movement, in that it was simply a response to the growing obsession with materials and celebrities. Gruenburg 3 When regarding the Pop art movement, there is much mention of a duality between high and low images and standards. Being that Pop art typically broke all of the rules of conventional aesthetics, it was considered, even by the artists themselves, as “low” imagery. Justin Wolf, writing for The Art Story Foundation’s website explains the Pop art’s historical relevance and reiterates: It would be one of the goals of the Pop art movement to blur the boundaries between ‘high’ art and ‘low’ popular culture. The notion that there is no hierarchy of culture, and that art may borrow from any source and mix it with other, regardless of their context and history, has been one of the most important characteristics of Postmodernism as a cultural movement. (Wolf 1) The Pop art movement brought about many major changes to the art world. Art had progressed from the obscure, elite or natural to the mundane and ordinary through this movement. The art world during the 20th century went through many phases; in fact, never before in history were so many different periods of popular artistic style condensed into such a small amount of time. Many critics and art scholars considered the Pop art movement as the next step in progression behind Cubism and Dadaism, both abstract commentaries on political and social happenings. Although these other movements were recognizable and important in their own ways, the Pop art movement was the most notable and famous of any art period of the 20th century. This accelerated pace of the evolution of art was most likely due to the vast changes during that time period. The Industrial Revolution brought about many changes to the world, especially during the 20th Gruenburg 4 century. Technology was changing at a more rapid rate than the world had ever seen. These changes brought about revolutions in many aspects of life. The 1950’s brought about a lot of “firsts” in American culture and technology. The first Peanuts comic strip was published in 1950; just one year later the first live national television broadcast took place. The 50’s were considered the Golden Age of Television and most notably, the time period of the Baby Boomers. Progress was occurring; industry was growing almost as fast and large as families at that time. Due to the affects of the Second World War still so fresh on the minds’ of many Americans, none of this growth and expansion would have ever seemed to have a negative affect to the average American. The 50’s solidified the idea that America was the Land of Opportunity, and the American Dream was very real to many Americans. So why was the next major art movement to shake the world one that criticized this way of life? Were the artists criticizing the people themselves or the industries that were taking advantage of their eagerness to succeed? Whether the Pop art movement meant to actually criticize the mindset of the time, or to simply bring it to light as an obvious factor of American life is still left up to debate in the scholarly art world. Due to the factors at play during the time period of the Pop art movement, it is understandable that American’s were excessively materialistic and celebrity-obsessed. Many people were still reeling from the devastating years prior: the Great Depression and the Second World War. However, it is also understandable that this mindset would be criticized. It is very likely that the major advocates and components of the Pop art movement were simply pointing out the fact that Americans were seemingly more Gruenburg 5 interested in temporary fixes (materials and celebrities) than their own personal lives and endeavors. A certain sense of personality and character can get lost easily in massproduction and consumption. Although the Pop art period in art history lasted only about twenty years, its affects are still seen today in the art and commercial advertisement worlds. The fusion between the two mediums has had a lasting impact on contemporary art. The aspect of this art movement that did not have such a lasting affect, however, was the overall message. Seemingly some viewers and critics have understood the message in regards to American mass-consumption and production, but this realization has not been shocking enough to make any lasting impressions.