Pop Art
Art Production Fund teams up with Barneys and the estate of Roy Lichtenstein to produce a line of accessories and homewares, including a revival of Lichtenstein’s 1966 dinnerware set.
Transforming still life subjects from flowers to coke bottles, fruit to cigarettes.
In a new show at MoMA, Claes Oldenburg is the gritty, gloppy father of Pop.
The Japan Society shows off the pop art influence of classic Japanese prints.
Just spin some Euro Disco and you’re ready to party.
Pop Art usually brings to mind Campbell’s Soup ads and bright, cheery depictions of American culture, but Sinister Pop uncovers a darker side of Pop, the kind they don’t show on TV.
Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective displays over one hundred popular paintings, drawings, and sculptures from throughout Lichtenstein’s career.
Richard Artschwager is one of the most influential trailblazers of American contemporary art.
Ed Ruscha is a key figure in Los Angeles’s ongoing battle for recognition as a center for fine art.
This art is lightning fast.
“This is the best moment of my life,” Yayoi Kusama told Whitney Museum Director Adam Weinberg. On the brink of a retrospective at the museum and the unveiling of a much-hyped collaboration with Louis Vuitton, the eighty-two-year-old artist is most definitely on the rise.






































































