International Pop Dallas Museum of Art Oct 11 2015jan 17 2016
Installation View of the Exhibition 'International Pop', Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 2015
'International Popular' at Walker Art Heart
Organized by the Walker Art Centre and on view Apr 11 through Baronial 29, 2015, 'International Pop' is a groundbreaking historical survey that chronicles the global emergence of Pop Fine art from the mid-1950s to the early 1970s.
Find out more than well-nigh all shown artists on this page.
Post-obit the Walker's presentation, the exhibition will travel to the Dallas Museum of Fine art (October 11, 2015 – January 17, 2016) and the Philadelphia Museum of Art (February xviii – May fifteen, 2016).
More details on the Walker Art Center artist-info 'International Pop' exhibition page.
Some other groundbreaking and of import survey later this year is underscoring the Walker Art Middle 'International Pop' exhibition by Darsie Alexander and Bartholomew Ryan and its new aproach: 'The World Goes Popular' at the Tate Modern, 17 September 2015–24 January 2016, with more than details on the Tate Modernistic artist-info 'The World Goes Pop' exhibition page.
Pop is amidst the most broadly recognized phenomena of postwar art, primarily identified with United kingdom and the U.S. In truth, however, the Pop impulse was strikingly nomadic, contagiously spreading non only through Britain and the U.Due south. but likewise Japan, Latin America, and
both Eastern and Western Europe. From its inception, Pop migrated across borders and media, seizing the power of mass media and communication to reach a new class of viewers and adherents who would be drawn to its dynamic attributes. However, every bit this exhibition will reveal, singled-out iterations of Pop were developing worldwide that alternatively celebrated, cannibalized, rejected, or transformed some of the presumed qualities of Pop in the U.Due south. and United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland.
Curated by Darsie Alexander (at present Katonah Museum) with Bartholomew Ryan (at present The Andy Warhol Museum) for the Walker Art Center in consultation with an international group of scholars and curators, International Pop asserts that Pop was not a singular artistic way or brand, but a roving spirit and ethos moving with unprecedented forcefulness through civilisation at large in the 1960s through a new abundance of everyday commodities, mass media production, and mainstream advertisement.
A key ambition of the exhibition is to show artists in the specific contexts from which they emerged, too equally to create relations betwixt works beyond time and place. The exhibition is therefore organized into contextual sections—specific places or institutions—and broader thematic sections:
THEMATIC SECTIONS
New Realisms – The Image Travels & the Archive Shifts – Distribution & Domesticity – Pop & Politics – Love & Despair
CONTEXTUAL SECTIONS
United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland: The Contained Group & the New Scene
Germany: Capitalist Realism
Brazil: The New Consciousness
Argentine republic: The Instituto Torcuato Di Tella & Pop Lunfardo
Nippon: The Sōgetsu Art Centre & Tokyo Pop
'International Popular' at Walker Fine art Center – 140 Artists on View by Exhibition Department
| New Realisms Thomas Bayrle (*1937) Antônio Dias (*1944) Jim Dine (*1935) Richard Hamilton (1922-2011) Jean-Pierre Mirouze (*1936) Robert Rauschenberg (1925 - 2008) Martial Raysse (*1936) James Rosenquist (*1933) Mimmo Rotella (1918-2006) Niki de Saint Phalle [Niki Matthews] (1930-2002) Mario Schifano (1934-1998) Shinohara Ushio (*1932) Jean Tinguely (1925-1991) Andy Warhol (1928-1987) | The Paradigm Travels, The Archive Shifts Bruce Conner (1933-2008) Antônio Dias (*1944) Rosalyn Drexler (*1926) Ray Johnson (1927-1995) Jirí Kolár (1914-2002) Július Koller (1939-2007) Roy Lichtenstein (1923-2997) Eduardo Paolozzi (1924-2005) Peter Roehr (1944-1968) Tanaami Keiichi (*1936) |
| Distribution & Domesticity Billy Apple (*1935) ERRÓ, [Gudmundur Gudmundsson] (*1932) Marisol (Maria Sol Escabar) (*1930) Robert Indiana (*1928) Edward Ruscha (*1937) Shinohara Ushio (*1932) Paul Thek (1933-1988) Wayne Thiebaud (*1920) Robert Watts (1923-1988) Tom Wesselmann (1931-2004) | Pop & Politics Genpei Akasegawa (1937-2014) Thomas Bayrle (*1937) Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973) Jorge de la Vega (1930-1971) Öyvind Fahlström (1928-1976) León Ferrari (1920-2013) Jasper Johns (*1930) Kudo Tetsumi (1935-1990) Sergio Lombardo (*1939) Marcello Nitsche (*1942) Hélio Oiticica (1937-1980) Yoko Ono (*1933) Yoko Ono & John Lennon (*1933, 1940-1980) Tiger (Kouichi) Tateishi (*1941) Cláudio Tozzi (*1944) |
| Honey & Despair Evelyne Axell (1935-1972) Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973) Rosalyn Drexler (*1926) Tano Festa (1938-1988) Jann Haworth (*1942) David Hockney (*1937) Pine Pascali(1935-1968) Wanda Pimentel (*1943) Michelangelo Pistoletto (*1933) Marjorie Strider (1934-2014) Andy Warhol (1928-1987) Jerzy Ryszard 'Jurry' Zielinski (1943-1980) Jana Želibská (*1941) | Shop Window Genpei Akasegawa (1937-2014) Clive Barker (*1940) Christo [Christo Javacheff] (*1935) Fluxus: "Eric Andersen (*1940), George Brecht (1926-2008), John Cale (*1926), John Cavanaugh (1921-1985), Albert Fine (1932-1987), Ken Friedman (*1949), Fred Lieberman (1940-2013), George Maciunas (1931-1978), Yoko Ono (*1933), Ben Patterson (*1934), Willem de Ridder (*1939), James Riddle (*1933), Paul Sharits (1943-1993), Bob Sheff (*1945), Stanley Vanderbeek (1927-1984), Ben Vautier (*1935), Robert Watts (1923-1988)" Jasper Johns (*1930) Yayoi Kusama (*1929) Cildo Meireles (*1948) Colin Self (*1941) Andy Warhol (1928-1987) Robert Watts (1923-1988) |
| Britain: The Independent Group & The New Scene Peter Blake (*1932) Derek Boshier (*1937) Pauline Boty (1938-1966) Richard Hamilton (1922-2011) Eduardo Paolozzi (1924-2005) Joe Tilson (*1928) | Germany: Capitalist Realism Capitalist Realism Portfolio: "G. P. Brehmer (1938-1997), K. H. Hödicke (*1938), Konrad Lueg (1939-1996), Sigmar Polke (1941-2010), Gerhard Richter (*1932), Wolf Vostell(1932-1998)" Manfred Kuttner (1937-2007) Konrad Lueg (1939-1996) Sigmar Polke (1941-2010) Gerhard Richter (*1932) |
| Brazil: The New Consciousness Antônio Henrique Amaral (*1935) Raymundo Colares (1944-1986) Antônio Dias (*1944) Rubens Gerchman (1942-2008) Nelson Leirner (*1932) Anna Maria Maiolino (*1942) Antonio Manuel (*1947) Marcello Nitsche (*1942) Décio Noviello (*1929) Cláudio Tozzi (*1944) Andy Warhol (1928-1987) | Argentina: Instituto Torcuato Di Tella & Pop Lunfardo Edgardo Giménez (*1942) & Marilu Marini (*1945) & Dalila Puzzovio (*1942) & Alfredo Rodriguez Arias (*1944) & Charlie Squirru (*1934) & Juan Stoppani (1935) Delia Cancela & Pablo Mesejean (*1940, 1937-1991) Eduardo Costa (*1940) Edgardo Giménez (*1942) Edgardo Giménez & Dalila Puzzovio & Charlie Squirru ( (*1942, *1942, *1934) Marta Minujín (*1943) Marta Minujín & Rubén Santantonín (*1937, *?) Dalila Puzzovio (*1942) Charlie Squirru (*1934) |
| Japan: Sogetsu Fine art Centre Jasper Johns (*1930) Kojima Nobuaki (*1935) Okamoto Shinjiro (*1933) Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) Shinohara Ushio (*1932) Tanaami Keiichi (*1936) Tezuka Osamu (1928-1989) Yokoo Tadanori (*1936) |
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Source: https://www.artist-info.com/blog/international-pop-at-walker-art-center/
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