Skip to main content

Marian Zazeela

Christo and More SMS A Collection of Multiples 'William N. Copley, 1968'
Christo and More SMS A Collection of Multiples 'William N. Copley, 1968'

Christo and More SMS A Collection of Multiples 'William N. Copley, 1968'

By Christo and Jeanne-Claude, Roy Lichtenstein, Yoko Ono 1

Located in Chicago, IL

Volume No. 1 February 1968 Little Box of Earthquake and Cotton (cover), Irving Penn; Black Dress, James Lee Byars; Chicago Project…, Walter de Maria; My Country ‘Tis of Thee, Kasper...

Category

Vintage 1960s American Mid-Century Modern Books

Materials

Paper

Recent Sales

SMS, New York:  William Copley. The Letter Edged in Black Press, 1968.
SMS, New York:  William Copley. The Letter Edged in Black Press, 1968.

SMS, New York: William Copley. The Letter Edged in Black Press, 1968.

By Roy Lichtenstein

Located in New York, NY

Volume 1: Irving Petlin, Su Braden, James Lee Byars, Christo, Walter de Maria, Richard Hamilton, Kaspar Koening, Julien Levy ,Sol Mednick, Nancy Reitkopf, La Monte Young & Marian Za...

Category

1960s Contemporary Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

William Copley, SMS Portfolios 1-6
William Copley, SMS Portfolios 1-6

William Copley, SMS Portfolios 1-6

Sold

H 9.85 in W 7.88 in D 14.18 in

William Copley, SMS Portfolios 1-6

By Billy Copley, Dimitri Petrov, Roy Lichtenstein

Located in CA, CA

Volume 1: Irving Petlin, Su Braden, James Lee Byars, Christo, Walter de Maria, Richard Hamilton, Kaspar Koening, Julien Levy, Sol Mednick, Nancy Reitkopf, La Monte Young & Marian Zaz...

Category

Vintage 1960s American Prints

People Also Browsed

Breakfast at Tiffany's, Signed by Truman Capote, First Edition, 1958
Breakfast at Tiffany's, Signed by Truman Capote, First Edition, 1958

Breakfast at Tiffany's, Signed by Truman Capote, First Edition, 1958

Located in Colorado Springs, CO

Capote, Truman. Breakfast at Tiffany's: A short novel and three stories. New York: Random House, 1958. First edition, first issue printing. Signed by Truman Capote. In the original p...

Category

Vintage 1950s American Books

Materials

Paper

Mid-Century Modern Record Player Cabinet by Carlo Hauner and Martin Eisler, 1955
Mid-Century Modern Record Player Cabinet by Carlo Hauner and Martin Eisler, 1955

Mid-Century Modern Record Player Cabinet by Carlo Hauner and Martin Eisler, 1955

By Carlo Hauner, Martin Eisler, Carlo Hauner and Martin Eisler, Forma

Located in New York, NY

A Caviúna record player produced by Forma S.A. Móveis e Objetos de Arte in the 1950s, with designs by Carlo Hauner and Martin Eisler. This record player has two hanging doors that ...

Category

Vintage 1950s Brazilian Mid-Century Modern Musical Instruments

Materials

Hardwood

For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway, First Edition in Original DJ, 1940
For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway, First Edition in Original DJ, 1940

For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway, First Edition in Original DJ, 1940

Located in Colorado Springs, CO

Hemingway, Ernest. For Whom the Bell Tolls. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940. First edition, first printing. Octavo. Publisher’s beige cloth boards, first issue dust jacket. P...

Category

Vintage 1940s American Books

Materials

Paper

1930 The Savoy Cocktail Book
1930 The Savoy Cocktail Book

1930 The Savoy Cocktail Book

$6,550

H 8 in W 2 in D 5.5 in

1930 The Savoy Cocktail Book

By Harry Craddock

Located in Bath, GB

A signed, first edition of this iconic and definitive cocktail recipe book. Signed by the author to Arthur Strange with a presentation inscription wishing them 'all the best'. His s...

Category

Vintage 1930s British Books

Materials

Paper

Get Updated with New Arrivals
Save "Marian Zazeela", and we’ll notify you when there are new listings in this category.

Roy Lichtenstein for sale on 1stDibs

Roy Lichtenstein is one of the principal figures of the American Pop art movement, along with Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist, Claes Oldenburg and Robert Rauschenberg.

Drawing inspiration from comic strips, Lichtenstein appropriated techniques commercial printing in his paintings, introducing a vernacular sensibility to the visual landscape of contemporary art. He employed visual elements such as the halftone dots that comprise a printed image, and a comic-inspired use of primary colors gave his paintings their signature “Pop” palette.

Born and raised in New York City, Lichtenstein enjoyed Manhattan’s myriad cultural offerings and comic books in equal measure. He began painting seriously as a teenager, studying watercolor painting at the Parsons School of Design in the late 1930s, and later at the Art Students League, where he worked with American realist painter Reginald Marsh. He began his undergraduate education at Ohio State University in 1940, and after a three-year stint in the United States Army during World War II, he completed his bachelor’s degree and then his master’s in fine arts. The roots of Lichtenstein’s interest in the convergence of high art and popular culture are evident even in his early years in Cleveland, where in the late 1940s, he taught at Ohio State, designed window displays for a department store and painted his own pieces.

Working at the height of the Abstract Expressionist movement in the 1950s, Lichtenstein deliberately eschewed the sort of painting that was held in high esteem by the art world and chose instead to explore the visual world of print advertising and comics. This gesture of recontextualizing a lowbrow image by importing it into a fine-art context would become a trademark of Lichtenstein’s artistic style, as well as a vehicle for his critique of the concept of good taste. His 1963 painting Whaam! confronts the viewer with an impact scene from a 1962-era issue of DC Comics’ All American Men of War. Isolated from its larger context, this image combines the playful lettering and brightly colored illustration of the original comic with a darker message about military conflict at the height of the Cold War. Crying Girl from the same year featured another of Lichtenstein’s motifs — a woman in distress, depicted with a mixture of drama and deadpan humor. His work gained a wider audience by creating a comic-inspired mural for the New York State Pavilion of the 1964 World's Fair, he went on to be represented by legendary New York gallerist Leo Castelli for 30 years.

In the 1970s and ’80s, Lichtenstein experimented with abstraction and began exploring basic elements of painting, as in this 1989 work Brushstroke Contest. In addition to paintings in which the brushstroke itself became the central subject, in 1984 he created a large-scale sculpture called Brushstrokes in Flight for the Port Columbus International Airport in Ohio. Still Life with Windmill from 1974 and the triptych Cow Going Abstract from 1982 both demonstrate a break from his earlier works where the subjects were derived from existing imagery. Here, Lichtenstein paints subjects more in line with the norms of art history — a pastoral scene and a still life — but he has translated their compositions into his signature graphic style, in which visual elements of printed comics are still a defining feature.

Lichtenstein’s work is represented in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, Tate Modern, and many others. He was awarded National Medal of Arts in 1995, two years before he passed away.

Find a collection of Roy Lichtenstein prints, drawings and more on 1stDibs.