Popular culture grew as a practice of an art movement that soon became known as Pop Art. This movement was highly significant within modernist art in the 1950-1960s. Pop Art took the world by storm but originated Great Britain and North America first. Incorporating popular commercial motifs such as entertainment definitely advanced in art. Modernism has now become the iconic status as it is today, altering the art world endlessly. From using conventional materials and concepts, to breaking the social status within society, the movements definitely had insightful effect on the world and its views on art.
Modernism is a philosophical movement that along with cultural trends and changes occurred from wide-scale and extensive transformations
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Because in, the United States, it was known as “representational art and hard-edged composition” due to many responses by artists using regular reality, impersonal, sarcasm and parody to defuse the personal symbolism of Abstract expressionism. While employing sarcasm and parody similarly to America, there was more academic focus on the dynamic imagery of American popular culture as powerful, manipulative symbolic devices that were affecting whole patterns of life, while improving prosperity of a society. In Britain, the early stages of Pop art were a matter of ideas powered by American popular culture. In comparison to American artists, who were inspired by the experience of living within that culture, comparably, pop art was both an extension and a repudiation of …show more content…
The most prominent example of Duchamp's association with Dada was his submission of Fountain, a urinal, to the Society of Independent Artists exhibit in 1917. Jury did not select artworks in the Independent Artists shows, and all pieces submitted were displayed. However, the show committee insisted that Fountain was not art, and rejected it from the show. This caused uproar amongst the Dadaists, and led Duchamp to resign from the board of the Independent Artists. While both these movements explored some of the same subjects, pop art “replaced the destructive, ironic, and disordered impulses of the Dada movement” with disconnected intention of the matters of mass culture. Among many of those artists seen by producing work leading up to Pop art are Marcel Duchamp, Pablo Picasso, Kurt Schwitters, and Man Ray. Pop Art was used by to describe paintings that “celebrated consumerism of the post World War II period”. As the most iconic artist of this era was Andy Warhol, as well as Roy Lichtenstein both, well especially Lichtenstein use of Benday dots that in fact is a technique used in commercial reproduction. This is technique is known to be seen in comics to dramatize characters facial