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Pauline Boty
1938 – 1966

Pauline Boty

(6 March 1938 – 1 July 1966) was a British painter and co-founder of the 1960s' British Pop art movement of which she was the only acknowledged female member. Boty's paintings and collages often demonstrate a joy in self-assured femininity and female sexuality, as well as criticism (both overt and implicit) of the "man's world" in which she lived. Her rebellious art, combined with her free-spirited lifestyle, has made Boty a herald of 1970s' feminism.
Pauline Veronica Boty was born in Carshalton, Surrey, in 1938 into a middle-class Catholic family. The youngest of four children, she had three older brothers and a stern father who made her keenly aware of her position as a girl. In 1954 she won a scholarship to the Wimbledon School of Art, which she attended despite her father's disapproval. Boty's mother, on the other hand, was supportive, having herself been a frustrated artist and denied parental permission to attend the Slade School of Fine Art. Boty earned an Intermediate diploma in lithography (1956) and a National Diploma in Design in stained glass (1958). Her schoolmates called her "The Wimbledon Bardot" on account of her resemblance to the French film star Brigitte Bardot. Encouraged by her tutor Charles Carey to explore collage techniques, Boty's painting became more experimental. Her work showed an interest in popular culture early on. In 1957 one of her pieces was shown at the Young Contemporaries exhibition alongside work by Robyn Denny, Richard Smith and Bridget Riley.

She studied at the School of Stained Glass at the Royal College of Art (1958–61). She had wanted to attend the School of Painting, but was dissuaded from applying as admission rates for women were much lower in that department. Despite the institutionalised sexism at her college, Boty was one of the stronger students in her class, and in 1960 one of her stained-glass works was included in the travelling exhibition Modern Stained Glass organised by the Arts Council. Boty continued to paint on her own in her student flat in west London and in 1959 she had three more works selected for the Young Contemporaries exhibition. During this time she also became friends with other emerging Pop artists, such as David Hockney, Derek Boshier, Peter Phillips and Peter Blake.
While at the Royal College of Art, Boty engaged in a number of extracurricular activities. She sang, danced, and acted in risqué college reviews, published her poetry in an alternative student magazine, and was a knowledgeable presence in the film society where she developed her interest, especially in European new wave cinema. She was also an active participant in Anti-Ugly Action, a group of RCA students involved in the stained glass, and later architecture, courses who protested against new British architecture that they considered offensive and of poor quality.
Death
In June 1965 Boty became pregnant. During a prenatal exam, a tumour was discovered and she was diagnosed with cancer (malignant Thymoma). She refused to have an abortion and also refused to receive chemotherapy treatment that might have harmed the foetus. Instead she smoked marijuana to ease the pain of her terminal condition. She continued to entertain her friends and even sketched The Rolling Stones during her illness. Her daughter, Katy (later Boty) Goodwin, was born on 12 February 1966. Pauline Boty died at the Royal Marsden Hospital on 1 July that year. She was 28 years old. Her daughter, Boty Goodwin, died of an overdose on 12 November 1995 aged 29.





 

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Pauline Boty in her studio in London in 1963
Photograph: Michael Ward


 

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The Only Blonde in the World
Pauline Boty
1963

 

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Nude Woman in a Coastal Landscape
Pauline Boty
, circa 1958.

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Monica Vitti with Heart
Pauline Boty
1963

 

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Celia Birtwell and Some of her Heroes
Pauline Boty
1963

 

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Countdown to Violence
Pauline Boty
1964

 

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Pauline Boty, Untitled (Pears Inventor), c. 1959
 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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A Big Hand
,c. 1960
Pauline Boty

 

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La Conductrice et son double / Les DS by Evelyn Axell, 1965
Pauline Boty

 

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Epitaph to Something’s Gotta Give by Pauline Boty, 1962
Pauline Boty

 

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Pauline Boty and Scandal ’63, photographed by Michael Ward, 1964, via National Portrait Gallery, London
 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty, Buffalo, c. 1961-1962
 

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With Love to Jean-Paul Belmondo
Pauline Boty
1962

 

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Pauline Boty, Untitled (Sunflower Woman), c. 1963
 

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Pauline Boty and With Love to Jean Paul Belmondo, photographed by Lewis Morley, 1964
Pauline Boty

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Colour Her Gone
Pauline Boty
1962

 

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Pauline Boty
Untitled

 

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Pauline Boty, What we need now to discover in the social realm is the moral, 1964,
 

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It's A Man's World II
Pauline Boty
1965

 

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Bum
Pauline Boty
1966

 

Alain Jacquet
1939 – 2008

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Alain Jacquet , Déjeuner sur l'Herbe

 

Alain Jacquet (22 February 1939 – 4 September 2008) was a French artist representative of the Nouvelle Figuration movement that was linked to the American Pop Art movement. Jacquet lived in New York and Paris and taught at the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs. He was married (1992) to Sophie Matisse, great-granddaughter of the French Fauvist artist Henri Matisse. They had one daughter, Gaïa Jacquet-Matisse. Jacquet's art is displayed in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Centre Pompidou, the Musée National d'Art Moderne, in Paris. Jacquet died of esophageal cancer in Manhattan.
Jacquet was born in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. Though he studied architecture at École des Beaux-Arts, as a painter he was an autodidact.

Camouflage Botticelli (Birth of Venus) (1963–64) is a famous work of his. Camouflage Botticelli is located in the Anchorage Museum, in Alaska. In a series of camouflage paintings, he often used motifs from older, very famous paintings, such as in this case from the painting The Birth of Venus by Sandro Botticelli. Jacquet also borrowed the form of Manet's Luncheon on the Grass, which itself had referred to the 1515 engraving The Judgment of Paris by Marcantonio Raimondi and The Pastoral Concert c. 1510, by Giorgione or Titian in the Louvre, in a series of 95 identical serigraphies[4] portraying the art critic Pierre Restany and the painter Mario Schifano, one of which was left in the lobby of the hotel Chelsea in New York City for payment of his room.

 

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Alain Jacquet


 

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Alain Jacquet

Portrait d'Homme vert, rouge jaune, 1964
 

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Alain Jacquet

Composition, 1962
 

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Alain Jacquet
Untitled
 

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Alain Jacquet 
Vénus au miroir
 

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Alain Jacquet
La Source
1965
 

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Alain Jacquet
La Source (Détail), 1965
 

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Alain Jacquet
Bulldozers
 

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Alain Jacquet (1939-2008)
Gabrielle d'Estrées
1965
 

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Alain Jacquet
"The Tub"
1965 
 

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Alain Jacquet
The Tub

 

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Alain Jacquet :
Des images d'Epinal aux Camouflages
(1961 - 1963)
 

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Alain Jacquet, Camouflage :
Venus de cnide,
1964
 

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Alain Jacquet
“Camouflages”
1964
 

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Alain Jacquet
Untitled
 

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Alain Jacquet
Nu et voiture
 

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Alain Jacquet

Laure et Grégoire debout (+ mise en scène
 

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Alain Jacquet
Florence
 

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Alain Jacquet , b. 1939 La vièrge et l'enfant oil, pencil and silkscreen print on canvas, in two parts


 

Gerard Fromanger
1939 – 2021

Gérard Fromanger

(6 September 1939 – 18 June 2021) was a French visual artist. A painter who also employed collage, sculpture, photography, cinema, and lithography, he was associated with the French artistic movement of the 1960s and 1970s, called Figuration Narrative (new figurative representation), somewhat like pop art. Fromanger was alsi associated with photorealism.

Fromanger studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where his first solo exhibition was held in 1966. Souffles, his large translucent "half-balloon" street sculptures, attracted attention in 1968. He also collaborated with Jean-Luc Godard to make the short "Film-tract 1968". Urban life and the consumer society are themes well represented in his work.

The Nouvelle Figuration movement (sometimes called figuration narrative or représentation narrative) is considered to have been a reaction against abstract art, with a more political slant than American pop art. Fromanger has been described as a social critic who takes a political position without neglecting the poetic dimension.

Michel Foucault, a friend of Fromanger's, wrote about his work in Photogenic Painting.

In 2005, a retrospective exhibition, Gérard Fromanger: rétrospective 1962–2005, was shown at various galleries in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland. Fromanger lived and worked in both Siena and Paris.


 

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Gérard Fromanger

 

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Le rouge et le noir dans le prince de Hombourg
Gerard Fromanger
1965

 

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From the Album Le Rouge (Mai 1968)
Gerard Fromanger
1968

 

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From the Album Le Rouge (Mai 1968)
Gerard Fromanger
1968

 

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Drapeau américain (Le Rouge)
Gerard Fromanger
1968

 

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Souffle de Mai
Gerard Fromanger
1968

 

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Tirez-Tirez, Boulevard des Italiens
Gerard Fromanger
1971

 

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Violet de Mars
Gerard Fromanger
1972

 

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Le Kiosque
Gerard Fromanger
1973

 

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Le peintre et son modèle
Gerard Fromanger
1974

 

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Existe
Gerard Fromanger
1976

 

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Jean-Paul Sartre
Gerard Fromanger
1976

 

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À mon seul désir
Gerard Fromanger
1979

 

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Le matin
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Corps à corps, bleu
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Bastille Flux
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Marcel (portrait de Marcel Duchamp)
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Au printemps
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Bleu Azural
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Vert Véronèse
Gerard Fromanger

 

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Violet d’Egypte
Gerard Fromanger



 

Antony Donaldson
b.1939

Antony Donaldson

(born 2 September 1939) is a British painter and sculptor, working in London from the beginning of the 1960s. Notable for his development of visual interplay between abstract and popular imagery, his work is associated with the Pop Art movement and known for his paintings of fast cars and women.

Throughout his career, Donaldson has exhibited extensively in Europe and all over the world and accomplished public and private commissions (especially in Japan and Hong Kong), but also producing many works for architectural projects in London such as the fountain at Tower Bridge Piazza and the large torso in Anchor Court. Later in his career Donaldson turned more to sculpture, using a variety of materials and media.

His works are part of a number of public collections including the British Museum, Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate in London, Berardo Collection Museum and Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon, the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, Olinda Museums in Pernambuco, Brazil, and the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Australia.

Antony Donaldson lives and works between London and southwest France.

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson

 

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Antony Donaldson



 

Peter Phillips
b.1939

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Peter Phillips

(born 21 May 1939) is an English artist. His work ranges from conventional oils on canvas to multi-media compositions and collages to sculptures and architecture.

As an originator of Pop art, Phillips trained at the Royal College of Art with his contemporaries David Hockney, Allen Jones, R.B. Kitaj and others figures in British Pop Art. When he was awarded a Harkness Fellowship he moved to New York, where he exhibited alongside American counterparts Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and James Rosenquist. Phillips later returned to Europe, where he now resides and continues to paint and exhibit.

 

Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips

 

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Peter Phillips




 

Sigmar Polke
1941 – 2010

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SIGMAR POLKE:

CAMELEONARDO DA WILLING. 1979. 

 

Sigmar Polke

(13 February 1941 – 10 June 2010) was a German painter and photographer.

Polke experimented with a wide range of styles, subject matters and materials. In the 1970s, he concentrated on photography, returning to paint in the 1980s, when he produced abstract works created by chance through chemical reactions between paint and other products. In the last 20 years of his life, he produced paintings focused on historical events and perceptions of them.
Polke, the seventh in a family of eight children, was born in Oels in Lower Silesia. He fled with his family to Thuringia in 1945, during the expulsion of Germans after World War II. His family escaped from the Communist regime in East Germany in 1953, traveling first to West Berlin and then to West Germany Rhineland.

Upon his arrival in West Germany, in Willich near Krefeld, Polke began to spend time in galleries and museums and worked as an apprentice in a stained glass factory in Düsseldorf between 1959 and 1960, before entering the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf (Arts Academy) at age twenty. From 1961 to 1967 he studied at the Düsseldorf Arts Academy under Karl Otto Götz, Gerhard Hoehme and deeply influenced by his teacher Joseph Beuys. He began his creative output during a time of enormous social, cultural, and artistic changes in Germany and elsewhere. During the 1960s, Düsseldorf, in particular, was a prosperous, commercial city and an important centre of artistic activity. In the early 1970s Polke lived at the Gaspelhof, an artists' commune.

From 1977 to 1991, he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Hamburg. His students included, among others, Georg Herold. He settled in Cologne in 1978, where he continued to live and work until his death in June 2010 after a long battle with cancer.

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke

 

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Sigmar Polke




 

Barbara Kruger
b.1945

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Barbara Kruger

(born January 26, 1945) is an American conceptual artist and collagist associated with the Pictures Generation. She is most known for her collage style that consists of black-and-white photographs, overlaid with declarative captions, stated in white-on-red Futura Bold Oblique or Helvetica Ultra Condensed text. The phrases in her works often include pronouns such as "you", "your", "I", "we", and "they", addressing cultural constructions of power, identity, consumerism, and sexuality. Kruger's artistic mediums include photography, sculpture, graphic design, architecture, as well as video and audio installations.

Kruger lives and works in New York and Los Angeles. She is an Emerita Distinguished Professor of New Genres at the UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture. In 2021, Kruger was included in Time magazine's annual list of the 100 Most Influential People.

 

Barbara Kruger

 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger
 

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Barbara Kruger




 

David Salle
b.1952

David Salle

(born September 28, 1952; last name pronounced "Sally") is an American Postmodern painter, printmaker, photographer, and stage designer. Salle was born in Norman, Oklahoma, and lives and works in East Hampton, New York. He earned a BFA and MFA from the California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, California, where he studied with John Baldessari. Salle’s work first came to public attention in New York City in the early 1980s.
David Salle was born to Russian Jewish immigrant parents on September 28, 1952, in Norman, Oklahoma, but grew up in Wichita, Kansas. He developed an interest in art at a very young age, spending his childhood and teenage years in art classes provided by a local art organization. At the age of eight or nine, he began taking life-drawing classes at the Wichita Art Association. During high school, he attended outside art classes three days a week.

After graduating from high school, Salle attended the California Institute of the Arts. There he trained and studied under John Baldessari, whom he credits for showing him a path to his artistry. Salle earned his BFA in three years, then received his MFA in two.

After graduating, Salle relocated to New York, where he worked with Vito Acconci. During this time, he established a working partnership with Mary Boone, a renowned gallery owner, and still works with her to this day.

Around the same time, Salle was hired by the American Ballet Theatre to design set and costumes. His work with dancer and choreographer Karole Armitage made the ballet a success, and Salle and Armitage fell in love. They eventually broke up, but continued to work together as friends.

In 1995, Salle made his Hollywood directorial debut with Search and Destroy, starring Christopher Walken and Griffin Dunne and produced by Martin Scorsese. The film met with mixed reactions. Salle now lives in East Hampton, New York.

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle

 

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David Salle





 

Jean Michel Alberola
b.1953

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Jean Michel Alberola

Born in 1953 in Saïda (Algeria), lives and works in Paris. "Painting is metaphysical in the sense that it is a story of the body. When I paint, it is my body that is affected", says Jean-Michel Alberola. Whether the subjects are Actaeon, Susanna and the elderly, the crucifixion or autobiographical figures, the body is central to his work, it is in pieces (eye, hand, foot) or reduced to a ghostly silhouette, a shadow. He makes "painting in tatters". His sources of inspiration are biblical and mythological. He draws from it iconographic motifs that he inserts into his works in the form of isolated fragments. We can see his paintings as puzzles to be reconstructed, rebuses to be elucidated. His mythological knowledge allows him to develop a personal mythology in which to define himself. For example, he sometimes signs his works under the pseudonym of «Actéon», a mythological figure with which he feels close. There does not seem to be a break between creation and life. His work is both biographical and situational. We can read references to Tintoretto, Veronese, Velázquez or Monet. 

 

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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JEAN-MICHEL ALBEROLA

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Keith Allen Haring
1958 – 1990

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

(May 4, 1958 – February 16, 1990) was an American artist whose pop art emerged from the New York City graffiti subculture of the 1980s. His animated imagery has "become a widely recognized visual language". Much of his work includes sexual allusions that turned into social activism by using the images to advocate for safe sex and AIDS awareness.[3] In addition to solo gallery exhibitions, he participated in renowned national and international group shows such as documenta in Kassel, the Whitney Biennial in New York, the São Paulo Biennial, and the Venice Biennale. The Whitney Museum held a retrospective of his art in 1997.

Haring's popularity grew from his spontaneous drawings in New York City subways—chalk outlines of figures, dogs, and other stylized images on blank black advertising spaces.[4] After gaining public recognition, he created colorful larger scale murals, many commissioned.[4] He produced more than 50 public artworks between 1982 and 1989, many of them created voluntarily for hospitals, day care centers and schools. In 1986, he opened the Pop Shop as an extension of his work. His later work often conveyed political and societal themes—anti-crack, anti-apartheid, safe sex, homosexuality and AIDS—through his own iconography.

Haring died of AIDS related complications on February 16, 1990.[6] In 2014, he was one of the inaugural honorees in the Rainbow Honor Walk in San Francisco, a walk of fame noting LGBTQ people who have "made significant contributions in their fields". In 2019, he was one of the inaugural 50 American "pioneers, trailblazers, and heroes" inducted on the National LGBTQ Wall of Honor within the Stonewall National Monument in New York City's Stonewall Inn.



 

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Keith Allen Haring

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Francois Boisrond
b.1959

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Francois Boisrond

 

Francois Boisrond

Francois Boisrond was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, near Paris in 1959. He studied from 1977 to 1980 at the National School of decorative Arts where he met Di-Rosa and Combas.
In 1981 he became involved in the Free Figuration movement and as a result participated in exhibition “Finished in Beauty” organised by Bernard Lamarche-Vadel in his Parisian apartment. His works were also presented in 1982 at the “Studios 81-82” exhibition organized by the Museum of Modern Art in the city of Paris. Inspired by visual products (advertising products, posters, stickers, video games etc.), cartoon characters, and by using acrylic paint, Francois Boisrond’s works are colourful, figurative and enigmatic, and his simplified shapes are often outlined in black. He portrays mainly characters, frequently symbolic in everyday situations, but he also depicts urban, maritime or rural landscapes.
Besides this Boisrond creates humanitarian and publicity posters. Since the 1990’s the artist has become interested in an imaginary public and the everyday life that invades each and every one of us. In 1989 Francois Boisrond took part in a collective exhibition “The 80’s” organized at the Foundation Cartier of Contemporary Art (Jouy-en-Josas). He will also be presenting his works in his own exhibitions in the Beaubourg Gallery (Paris) as well as in New York and London.
He lives and works in Paris where he teaches at the Ecole des Beaux-arts (art school).


 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond

 

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Francois Boisrond



 

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