£8,000-£11,500
$16,000-$24,000 Value Indicator
$15,000-$21,000 Value Indicator
¥80,000-¥110,000 Value Indicator
€9,000-€13,500 Value Indicator
$80,000-$120,000 Value Indicator
¥1,590,000-¥2,280,000 Value Indicator
$11,000-$16,000 Value Indicator
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71 x 71cm, Edition of 80, Screenprint
Medium: Screenprint
Edition size: 80
Year: 1972
Size: H 71cm x W 71cm
Signed: Yes
Format: Signed Print
Last Auction: March 2024
Value Trend:
AAGR (5 years) This estimate blends recent public auction records with our own private sale data and network demand.
TradingFloor
Roy Lichtenstein’s Mirrors review the symbolic status attributed to mirrors throughout history. The artist began this series in the late 1960s and concluded it in the early 1990s. In art and mythology, mirrors have been used to reveal complex perspectives and invisible truths. Lichtenstein’s enigmatic sequence follows the conventions of object painting, keeping the formal characteristics of his mirrors intact. However, the artist dismisses the item’s symbolism and functionality, liberating it from its intended purposes.
Mirror #4, executed in 1972, captures an enlarged circle rendered in dark brown and red. Yellow stripes and black dots crowd the edges of the geometric shape, marking its framework. The slightly distorted, curving lines on the left of the circle allude to the reflective attributes of glass. Lichtenstein’s abstract patterns both constitute and obscure the central image, presenting a mirror entirely devoid of reflections. Thus, Mirror #4 is as much a misrepresentation, as it is an illustration of a familiar object.
Over the course of his career, Lichtenstein embarked on several other series dealing with vision and representation. His Water Liliesand Reflections, for instance, explore various perceptions of light and reflection. Meanwhile, Lichtenstein’s Entablatures delve further into object painting, reproducing enlarged architectural fragments as their main composition.