“Hey, you there!” “STOP!” yelled the police officer. He had just caught a kid painting graffiti on a wall outside of a grocery store. As soon as the kid heard the police officer he ran. Art plays an enormous role in today’s society. People often view art as an important role in culture as well. Art can be broken down into many categories, whether the artist used a certain medium or uses different techniques. There are many ways to classify what are is, people consider books to be an art form, as well as poetry. First off, the American Renaissance was a period in American art, architecture, and literature that lasted roughly between 1830 and 1920. The first phase of the American Renaissance emerged as a literary movement in the 1830s. Three …show more content…
Pop Art refers to the paintings, assemblages, and collages of a small, yet powerful group of artists, in the 1950s. The term “Pop Art” originated from Britain (Kinder 1). Artists like Andy Warhol, Mel Ramos, and Roy Lichtenstein each created multiple series of paintings based on comic book characters. The works of Tom Wesselmann, Ed Ruscha, and Claes Oldenburg established even greater amounts of depersonalization, irony, and even vulgarity into American fine art. Even though by the end of the decade Pop Art was obsolete, it quickly found a place in many of America’s premiere galleries (Kinder 2). Pop art was able to affect the art of the next three decades by focusing on literalism and familiar …show more content…
Edward Chavez referred to the names of Mexican places, such as Xochimilco in the backgrounds of his abstract works. Between the Mexican-American and Chicano artists who matured in the 1950s are Michael Ponce de Leon of New York, Eugenio Quesada of Phoenix, and Ernesto Palomino of Fresno, California. Marisol Escobar was also a very important contributor to cultural art. Escobar was born in Paris in 1930, to Venezuelan parents. In the 1960s, she became internationally famous with her sculptures of well-known personalities, such as Lyndon Baines Johnson and John Wayne (DISCovering Multicultural America