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105 x 68cm, Edition of 50, Planographic print
Medium: Planographic print
Edition size: 50
Year: 1996
Size: H 105cm x W 68cm
Signed: Yes
Format: Signed Print
Last Auction: October 2019
TradingFloor
As one of the leading figures of the Pop movement, Roy Lichtenstein was notorious for turning ordinary comic strip panels into wry, monumental pieces of art. This was his way of elevating commercial modes of expression into the realms of fine art. Referring to his work as ‘industrial painting’, he rooted his projects in appropriated and refashioned genres and images.
Lichtenstein’s Venetian School II of 1996 belongs to a portfolio featuring unforeseen and humorous cartoon variations on venetian blinds. The print transforms a historical movement, namely the Florentine Renaissance, into a static comic depicting an everyday object. Echoing the artist’s infamously reticent sentiments, the striking white blinds are here lowered nearly all the way down to the window sill. Lichtenstein allows the beholder to glance a streak of blue dots at the bottom, hinting at a concealed and unknown scene beyond the shutters.
In line with the mint green composition of Venetian School I of the same portfolio, Lichtenstein aims for subtlety in this work. The print presents a compilation of machine-made forms, exhibited according to the formal conventions of fine art. Due to its mechanical look, Venetian School II also functions as a critical commentary on modern industrial society and contemporary culture.
Roy Lichtenstein, born in New York, 1923, is a seminal figure in the Pop Art movement, renowned for his comic book and advertisement-inspired artworks. His transformative journey from classical painter to Pop Art pioneer began with his iconic piece, Look Mickey, marking the fusion of painting with pop culture. Lichtenstein’s works, including Whaam!, Drowning Girl, and Crying Girl, blend parody and satire, challenging the boundaries between popular culture and ‘high art’. With over 5,000 pieces to his name, Lichtenstein’s enduring influence resonates in contemporary art, his works celebrated in prestigious institutions worldwide.