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Mural with Blue Brushstroke

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Year
  
1986

Artist
  
Roy Lichtenstein

Movement
  
Pop art

Created
  
1986

Mural with Blue Brushstroke PUBLIC MURALS Roy Lichtenstein Foundation

Dimensions
  
2070 cm × 990 cm (810 in × 390 in)

Location
  
AXA Center, 787 Seventh Avenue, New York City

Similar
  
Roy Lichtenstein artwork, Other artwork

Mural with Blue Brushstroke is a 1986 mural painting by Roy Lichtenstein that is located in the atrium of the Equitable Tower (now known as the AXA Center) in New York City. The mural was the subject of the book Roy Lichtenstein: Mural With Blue Brushstroke. The mural includes highlights of Lichtenstein's earlier works.

Contents

Mural with Blue Brushstroke missbinnyc Mural

Detail

Mural with Blue Brushstroke The Aesthete Only in New York

Lichtenstein was commissioned to create a large public work in the Equitable Tower. He was offered the commission in 1984 and began design work that fall, but strategizing took some time after that.

Mural with Blue Brushstroke httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumba

Like his 1973–1974 Artist's Studio series works, such as Artist's Studio—Look Mickey, Mural with Blue Brushstroke copies or reworks many of his own work as well as a few works of other artists. Several objects in the mirror had previously been incorporated in Artist's Studio—Look Mickey: The door, part of a mirror and an entablature. The beach ball from Girl with Ball is held by Léger-like forms rather than the previous young woman, and the top part of the ball is now a sunrise for a landscape with randomly placed dots. A light blue "brushstroke" represents a waterfall. The combination of images result in a pastiche.

Mural with Blue Brushstroke Mural with blue brushstroke by Roy Lichtenstein

Lichtenstein used his standard large canvas easel approach to this mural. He "...selected the motifs, he made a series of drawings and then collaged them together to make a maquette, measuring 34.25 by 17.5 inches, which became the working plan for the actual mural." Images were selected, and slides of the collage were projected onto the building wall. From these slides, the outline of the mural was drawn by Lichtenstein and his assistants. The outlines were filled in with color on the plaster wall. His assistants were David Lichtenstein, Robert McKeever, Arch O'Learhy, Brian O'Leary, James di Pasquale, and Fernando Pomalaza; the mural took six weeks to complete. Rather than the five colors he generally uses (the primary colors plus black and white), he used eighteen colors.

Mural with Blue Brushstroke Mural with Blue Brushstroke by Roy Lichtenstein

Lichtenstein had a strong preference for rectangular canvases. Analysis of his work refers to non-rectangular canvases as imperfect paintings and are described as being characteristic of Frank Stella. Mural with Blue Brushstroke is regarded as Lichtenstein's first 'imperfect' painting due to the depiction of a carpenter's triangle and French curve. It is an extreme sort of imperfection because the painting extends beyond the frame.

Critical review

Mural with Blue Brushstroke Specific Object Roy Lichtenstein Mural With Blue Brushstroke

The Mural offers "...a hedonistic view of earthly insignificance." When the mural opened Michael Brenson of The New York Times described the event as "..an event of major artistic importance. It marks a commitment to art on the part of a prominent American corporation that is as generous and innovative as any before."

Mural with Blue Brushstroke Roy Lichtenstein Mural With Blue Brushstroke Calvin Tomkins

This is an example of a brushstroke that serves to "...structurally anchor a whole complex composition..." The work is composed of "a cacophony of images" that serve as a "montage of his earlier subjects." The work is the embodiment of commercialism shrouded in the "aura of artistic fame".

References

Mural with Blue Brushstroke Wikipedia