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Search Results For:
roy lichtenstein
Showing 1-8 of 9 Results
Florent Morellet Charts 'Lichenstein'
Famed restaurateur–and up-and-coming artist–Florent Morellet on his father's shadow, cartographing with moss, and a possible new hospitality venture. BLOG POSTED: 11/05/09
Art dealer Tony Shafrazi is the kind of cheerful transgressive who artists love-one for whom the business of art isn't just business as usual. In fact, the business of being Tony Shafrazi is an art in itself. ARTICLE PUBLISHED: 04/03/09
Perched in his fortress of solitude high above the streets of Manhattan, Lucas Samaras has created a remarkable new body of work—and, in fact, an entire lifestyle—in self-imposed seclusion, driven in large part by the endless exploration of the one thing he can never escape: himself. As he prepares to represent his native Greece in this year’s Venice Biennale, the notoriously reclusive artist opens up about his new work, old ways, and why, despite the clamor of the critics, he’s still master of his domain. ARTICLE PUBLISHED: 02/26/09
Warhol's Pop Top Hits the Road
While Andy Warhol might be more famous for painting car crashes with his "Death and Disaster" series, he also, on occasion, fancied a car intact. BLOG POSTED: 02/12/09
Marc Jacobs is a fashion designer who's changing the meaning of that job. He does what an ordinary superdesigner does, i.e., create fashion-changing clothes for his own labels and for a great French house, but he also does so much more. ARTICLE PUBLISHED: 11/30/08
14 ARTISTS REFLECT HIS VISION, AND DOZENS OF FRIENDS REMEMBER HIM ARTICLE PUBLISHED: 11/30/08
First he outraged art audiences in the early 1990s with works like his shark in formaldehyde. (The New York city department of health banned one piece on the grounds that it might induce vomiting.) Then he outraged critics with tactics like decorating a cast of a human skull with 8,601 diamonds worth more than $20 million. Now, the ultimate British bad boy has outraged dealers by skipping the gallery and selling his work at auction. He may have just been making a little Hirst-style mischief-or changing the state of the art market forever. ARTICLE PUBLISHED: 11/26/08