Pop Art
Filed under Abstract, art, Arts, attitude, british artist, cinema, conformist, culture consumption, design, expressionism, high culture, ironic vision, language, Pop, society, urban culture, world war II
Pop Art announced the end of the boundaries between “high” culture and popular culture. The language of urban culture, present in the aesthetics of comics, ads advertising, product design and photography, is now celebrated the arts in a movement that erupted in the late 1950s almost simultaneously in Britain and the United States. With an ironic vision and critical, but often positive in relation to culture, consumption and the mass media, the artists of the Pop Art works were bold and invigorating, who tuned to a transformed world that emerged after World War II World.
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