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Roy Lichtenstein
I Love Liberty By Roy Lichtenstein (New York) - Die-Cut Sticker
Details
As a proud NYC-based brand, Lichtenstein’s depiction of our hometown statue called to us. Originally designed as a poster and print executed for an “I Love Liberty” TV celebration in 1982.
1 die-cut sticker (2 x 3 in.)
screen-printed on premium vinyl
Dishwasher safe
Made with <3 in the USA
I Love Liberty, 1982. 2024 © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein
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Roy Lichtenstein
When American Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein painted Look Mickey in 1961, it set the tone for his career. This primary-color portrait of the cartoon mouse introduced Lichtenstein’s detached and deadpan style at a time when introspective Abstract Expressionism reigned. Mining material from advertisements, comics, and the everyday, Lichtenstein brought what was then a great taboo—commercial art—into the gallery. He stressed the artificiality of his images by painting them as though they’d come from a commercial press, with the flat, single-color Ben-Day dots of the newspaper meticulously rendered by hand using paint and stencils. Later in his career, Lichtenstein extended his source material to art history, including the work of Claude Monet and Pablo Picasso, and experimented with three-dimensional works. Lichtenstein’s use of appropriated imagery has influenced artists such as Richard Prince, Jeff Koons, and Raymond Pettibon.