Pop Art (Page 2)

Pop Art, a vibrant movement blending commercial culture with fine arts, revolutionised Applied and Decorative Arts, infusing everyday objects with bold, ironic beauty.

A grid of Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans, a pop art masterpiece featuring 32 variations of the iconic red and white soup label.

Pop Art was never a cohesive movement. Instead, it inched its way up the international art scene, starting in the mid-1950s, as the invention of artists throughout Europe and the United States, artists who were often working independently and in isolation from each other.Read More →

Jean Paul Langlois - pop and pulp art

A selection of work by Métis artist Jean Paul Langlois from Vancouver Island, currently based in East Vancouver. Informed by pop and pulp culture, particularly Westerns, 70s sci-fi and Saturday morning cartoons, Langlois plays with ultra-saturated colours and motifs as a way of grappling with a sense of alienation from his own cultural backgrounds — both indigenous and settler.Read More →

Graphic design in pop culture has a history of challenging norms. Modern designs use bold colors, distorted typography, and playful imagery to captivate audiences and reflect contemporary culture.Read More →