Campbell's Soup Cans

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    Campbell's Soup Cans

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    movie near a dog food can that is very similar in style to Andy Warhol’s Campbell 's soup cans. I chose this image because 101 Dalmatians is one of my favorite Disney films. I also enjoy some of Andy Warhol’s work and his Campbell’s Soup Cans is one of his more famous works. I found this image is a part of the Disney fine art program. Tricia Buchanan-Benson is the artist of this piece. Many of her works are for Disney and other illustrations works. The image is a parody on Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Cans. The image also include a pun for having it hit the spot. The piece also using very similar color schemes by having the white and red soup can go with the white and red of the puppies. The image is very effective at copying the style of Andy’s work. This makes the general audience able to tell that the original work is being matched. There are some difference in line thickness. The artwork…

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    The Campbell’s Soup Cans piece truly breaks away from the normative traditions of art, which is an important factor when considering its prominence in the art community. Warhol has always utilized different printing tools, and used different methods and mediums when making his pieces. This different perspective shook up a nation’s idea on where art could come from and what can even be considered a refined form of art. He also chose such a common and mundane subject that made people question the…

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    The variation in price of these different products including Campbell's Tomato Soup is directly related to the amount consumers value them. The first product is a picture of the soup in the original color. Tomato soup is a staple food for the American people. The fact that Andy Warhol and many Americans found beauty in this reveals something about this time period. This shows that, in 1968 when Warhol make this art, there was something about everyday items that need to be recognized. This could…

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    Pop Art Museum Essay

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    Research Essay For this research trip, I attended a contemporary art museum in Los Angeles down town which called “The Broad” which has around thousands piece of contemporary art collections. Also we can easily find the many different kind of pop art pieces in there. On the second floor, there have many arresting pop art collections, like Roy Lichtenstein’s portrait paintings, Andy Warhol’s soup cans, Keith Haring’s untitled acrylic work, etc… Each one was play the most important role in the…

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    Andy Warhol’s thirty-two canvases titled 32 Soup Cans was created in 1962. This renowned American Pop Artist, known for his repeating reproductions and gaudy colors, produced this piece using the printmaking method. Warhol didn’t want his paintings of mass-produced commercial goods to be conceptually stimulating. He wanted to make his work relatable so that viewers could approach them and have a clear interpretation. Warhol replicated the appearance of manufactured objects and famous icons for…

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    My paper focuses on appropriation and how the progression of appropriation continued into Pop Art and what that could’ve translated into American society. I will look at appropriation in art to compare to the cultural values at the time and to go in depth about what it meant to Americans during the 1960s. During the 1960s, the time Pop Art was emerging in America, a war-consumed society was transitioning into a mass cultural embrace of media and art. Pop Art was the art of popular culture. It…

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    the Pop Art Movement significantly and without consumerism Pop Art would not have been able to exist. Consumerism was essential to Pop Art Movement as it gave meaning behind works that would have no significant value such as Andy Warhol’s Soup Can series which without consumerism would just be soup cans with…

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    Andy Warhol's Pop Art

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    strips, soup cans, traffic signs and all types of food ( Britannica 1). One of the most notable artists that has been discovering Pop Art at it’s finest is none that Andy Warhol. Warhol’s notable work in the art world has brought many attention as artist, writer, as well as filmmaker. Andy Warhol was born as…

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    Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns and Truman Capote. He was mostly known for his famous pop art but also did printmaking, painting, cinema, and photography. One of the nicknames that were given to him was “The Pope of Pop”. Some of his most famous artworks from 1962 are the Campbell’s soup cans, Marilyn Diptych, Green Coca-Cola Bottles, Gold Marilyn Monroe and Men in Her Life. A few of his pieces from 1963 are the Eight Elvises, Silver Car Crash and Triple Elvis. One of his films was an…

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    Pop art’s influences on American culture post World War II acted as a “cultural revolution” led by innovative artists, like Warhol, who used their art to influence the development of society. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s commentary of this piece stated, “What made these works significant was Warhol's co-opting of universally recognizable imagery, such as a Campbell's soup can, Mickey Mouse, or the face of Marilyn Monroe, and depicting it as a mass-produced item, but within a fine art…

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