New Realism and Pop Art New Realism andPop Art CHAPTER 2
New Realism and Pop Art New Realism andPop Art CHAPTER 2
1
The New Realism

The New Realism was founded in October 1960, driven by Pierre Restany.

 

The word “realism” comes from the 19th century literary movement which sought to show the hum-drum reality of daily life. As for the word “new”, it was very fashionable in France at the time! Literature  already had its New Novel, and the film industry its New Wave, so the time had come to  find something new for the visual arts!

 

Arman is one of the movement’s iconic figures. The reuse of objects was at the heart of his creations.

Arman, Poubelles des Halles (Waste from the Halles),
1961, accumulation of waste from the Halles centre in a box with glass lid, Pompidou Centre – National Museum of Modern Art, Paris © ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: © Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Philippe Migeat
Arman, Chopin’s Waterloo,
1961, Pompidou Centre – National Museum of Modern Art, Paris © ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: © Pompidou Centre, MNAM-CCI, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Adam Rzepka
Installation, Le Plein (Full Up) exhibition, Arman, Iris Clert Gallery,
1960, Paris © ADAGP Paris, 2021. Photo: © Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI Bibliothèque Kandinsky, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais / Fonds Shunk et Kender © Harry Shunk © Janos Kender
« New Realism is a way of recycling the poetry of real life in an urban, industrial setting, with its advertising. »
Pierre Restany, art critic and founder of New Realism
In a nutshell

Arman, who worked with re-used objects, was a figure of New Realism, a French movement created in 1960.

2
Yves Klein
View of the “Le Vide” (The Vacuum) exhibition, Yves Klein, Iris Clert Gallery, Paris,
1958 © Succession Yves Klein c/o ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: DR

Arman had the idea of his “Le Plein” (Full Up) exhibition because his friend Yves Klein had held an exhibition christened “Le Vide”(Empty)  two years before, in the same gallery, in which he presented nothing at all.

At the opening of the exhibition, a blue cocktail was served for the visitors. A few hours later, everyone was surprised to discover that their urine was blue. A playful way to absorb the colour!

 

From 1956, the colour blue was Klein’s trademark*. He even patented the chemical formula of a mixture of blue pigments and binding agents that he called IKB (International Klein Blue). As Klein never did things by halves, he painted 200 monochromes in IKB in 7 years.

 

Were these monochromes? Yes. Completely blue canvases.

 

*Yves Klein created the formula for a material colour, the combination of a binder with ultramarine blue pigment. The formula is INPI registered. The binder has the particularity of disappearing under the canvas to leave only the pure pigment to the surface.
Yves Klein, Monochrome bleu(Blue Monochrome),
1961, pure pigment and synthetic resin on gauze mounted on a panel, 77 x 55 inches, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York © Succession Yves Klein c/o ADAGP, Paris 2021
In a nutshell

Yves Klein created the formula for a blue colour that became the trademark of his works.

3
Pop art

While New Realism was developing in France, a similar artistic movement was spreading in the United States: Pop Art.

 

Pop means “popular” because the artists in this movement used images from television, films, advertising or comic strips to create their works.

 

Pop Art was, in fact the consumer society’s artistic movement. Like New Realists, its artists gave objects from daily life the status of works of art.

Roy Lichtenstein, Drowning Girl,
1963, Museum of Modern Art, New York © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein New York / ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: Gandalf’s Gallery, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Andy Warhol, Coca-Cola 210 Bottles
1962, silkscreen printing ink, synthetic polymer and graphite on canvas, 82.5 x 105 inches © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: © Christie’s Images / Bridgeman Images
Jasper Johns, Map,
1961, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York © Jasper Johns / ADAGP, Paris, 2021. Photo: Wally Gobetz, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
In a nutshell

American Pop Art drew on the consumer society, making everyday images into works of art.

4
Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol in 1984.
Photo: © Bridgeman Images
  • Dates : 1928 – 1987
  • Warhol, a fashion designer,  painted his first works by copying images from comics, such as Superman.
  • Two years later, he did endless reproductions of soup cartons, Coca Cola bottles and portraits of Elvis Presley or Marilyn Monroe, using strident colours.
  • This  charismatic, much publicised personality quickly rose to the same stardom as the people whose portraits he painted.
  • In his work, there was no longer any difference between great art or popular art: he linked both of them and changed all of them into a consumer object.
  • Clearing assuming this, he declared: “Business art is the step that comes after art”.
Andy Warhol, Marilyn,
1967, silkscreen printing ink, synthetic polymer and graphite on canvas, Museum of Modern Art, New York © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: Rael Garcia Arnes, CC BY-NC 2.0
Andy Warhol, Brillo Box,
1964, 17 x 17 x 14 inches, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: Ian Abbott, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Andy Warhol, Campbell Soup,
1965, silkscreen printing ink, synthetic polymer and graphite on canvas, Berardo Museum, Belém © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: Pedro Ribeiro Simões, CC BY 2.0
In a nutshell

The highly mediatized Andy Warhol, who was famous for his series of coloured images, blurred the boundaries between art and consumerism.

5
The technique of silkscreen printing
Andy Warhol, 32 Campbell’s Soup Cans,
1962, painting on 32 canvases, 20 x 16 inches (each canvas), Museum of Modern Art, New York © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Licensed by ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: rocor, CC BY-NC 2.0

In order to reach his objective, Warhol adopted a printing technique used by the press: silkscreen printing. This enabled him to create canvases quickly, and therefore in large numbers.

 

This tomato soup carton, copied on a massive scale, is even closer to its model: mass-produced soup from the factory.

 

How did Warhol obtain all these copies, practically speaking?

The recipe for good silkscreen printing:

 

  • Choose a photograph, enlarge it and copy it onto transparent film
  • Soak fabric in a frame in a photosensitive solution (as for photo negatives)
  • Attach the transparent film onto which the photo has been copied to this fabric
  • Project a bright light onto this assembly
  • Wash the fabric: all the black areas will wash off with water, leaving the fabric bare, whereas the white parts stick.
  • Place the fabric and the frame on the canvas to be used for the work.
  • Pour ink onto the fabric: the ink will only pass through the bare fabric.
In a nutshell

To produce his mass series of images, Warhol used a very quick printing technique: silkscreen printing.

6
English Pop Art
Richard Hamilton, Just what is it that makes today’s homes so different, so appealing?
2004, print on paper, 10 x 9 inches, Tate Modern, London © R. Hamilton. All Rights Reserved, ADAGP, Paris 2021. Photo: © Tate, CC-BY-NC-ND 3.0

Before American Pop Art invaded the whole world, the movement was born in England in the middle of the 1950s, based on advertising and magazines.

 

This is how one of the main artists defined the movement in 1957:

 

“Pop Art is: Popular (for the masses), Transient (short term), Expendable (easy to forget), low cost, mass produced, young (aims to reach youth), witty, sexy, gimmicky, glamourous and Big Business. “

In a nutshell

Pop Art and its principles, such as mass production, were invented in England during the 1950s.

7
Jeff Koons

Pop Art has a ready-made successor today: Jeff Koons.

 

Like Warhol before him, he uses the commonest objects from our consumer society, from the most popular stars or the most well-known images to make into works of art in flashy colours.

 

Like Warhol, Koons is himself both a star and a sellable brand. This status has nothing to do with chance: the artist has sought it in various ways, such as bringing to front of stage his sexual relationship with the Italian pornographic actress la Cicciolina, through a series of works.

 

He regularly makes record sales. In 2019, his rabbit sculpture was sold for 91.1 million dollars, making it the most expensive work of a living artist.

Jeff Koons, Lobster,
2003, aluminium polychrome and chain in varnished steel, 58 x 37 x 18 inches, Artist’s own collection © Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons, Michael Jackson and Bubbles,
1988, porcelain, 42 x 70.5 x 32.5 inches © Jeff Koons
Jeff Koons, Hulk,
2004-2012, bronze polychrome, 71 x 48,5 x 26 inches © Jeff Koons
In a nutshell

Jeff Koons, who is both a provocative businessman and an author of very flashy works of art, is the heir of Pop Art.

In summary, you have discovered:

  • The New Realism
  • Yves Klein
  • Pop art
  • Andy Warhol
  • The technique of silkscreen printing
  • English Pop Art
  • Jeff Koons
To train

The term “pop” in the Pop Art movement means …

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The movement that art critic Pierre Restany launched in 1960 was called …

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Artist Andy Warhol is famous for his use of the technique known as …

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