Andy Warhol's Pop Art Work

Words: 1040
Pages: 5

The art pieces that I chose for this report are Andy Warhol’s Heinz 57 Tomato Ketchup and Del Monte Freestone Peach Halves, 1964. According to the textbook, Exploring Art a Global, Thematic Approach written by Margaret Lazzari and Dona Schlesier, these pieces “are silk-screened wooden sculptures that look like mass produced cardboard packing boxes for common grocery store items” (Lazzari and Schlesier 139). The art movement that was taking place during this time was called “Pop Art”. At first, I thought this just meant that the art pieces were all three-dimensional or all popped out but I came to find out that that is not the case. Pop Art is actually a “movement was marked by a fascination with popular culture reflecting the affluence in post-war …show more content…
It seemed as if Warhol was trying to challenge people’s perceptions of art in general. Usually art was always about emotion and being romantic, but he wanted to try and change those ideals by making it simple. He used Pop Art and some post-modernist ideals in order to achieve his goal. In order to do this, he had to “embrace popular culture and commercial processes to produce work that appealed to the general public” (Andy Warhol Biography). Also, the textbook, Exploring Art a Global, Thematic Approach, describes Warhol as wanting to depict the consumerism that is rampant in American …show more content…
He grew up in a working-class home and his parents were immigrants. He is described as an artist that is well known and one of the best in the 20th century. He really started his work and ended up taking off when he did pieces of “Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor to Coca-Cola and Campbell’s Soup.” His works were and still are celebrated by many for portraying the realistic values of consumer culture. He fulfilled his dream by becoming a star and knowing that he made it through art. The art work was created in 1964 and describes the values of Pop Art and American consumerism. (Andy Warhol, Walker