THE BRITISH MUSEUM PREVIEWS THE AMERICAN DREAM: POP TO PRESENT EXHIBITION, CARL COURT © GETTY IMAGES
It was 1952, 7 years after the war, and London was still grey, cold and hungry. It was a fact not lost on a group of enigmatic young artists and architects who were increasingly growing tired of the conventions and strictures of post-war Britain. They didn’t know it then, but they were about to become revolutionaries. This disparate group of men and women had noted a strange juxtaposition between the drab bomb-pocked capital and the first springs of a brightly coloured consumerist society. So, they began to incorporate these bold new advertisements into their work in a way previously unthinkable. Pop Art was born.
“Mostly coming of age after the Second World War, these artists were only marginally affected by its traumas,” writes Flavia Frigeri in Pop Art, published by Thames & Hudson. “Instead they were able to indulge in the product frenzy and image deluge brought about by a rapidly growing consumer society.” Here were artists that claimed to worship the cola bottle and the soup can, who took inspiration from celebrity, advertising and consumer culture; they were ironic and rejected the conventional. Nothing would be the same again.
Pop might have started with Richard Hamilton and Eduardo Paolozzi (the artists) and Alison and Peter Smithson (the architects), but it would grow into a world-girdling movement that included names such as Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist, and Claes Oldenburg. Though it started in Britain, it grew into a form that is most readily associated with America. “The language of Pop Art was soon redeployed across the globe” as Frigeri puts it. It would not only change art, but change the world as a whole, reaching deep into the culture and changing our notions of fame, literature and fashion.
With the rise of mass media in the 50s and 60s, the world was plastered with images – on TV screens, newspapers and in cinemas. They became universal in a way they were not before. Pop took these images – from Mao, to Donald Duck, to Mickey Mouse and Che Guevara – and began to invest them with something revolutionary: equal importance. “Pop Art looks out into the world. It doesn't look like a painting of something, it looks like the thing itself,” said Lichtenstein.