Famous art stories on cartoons theme | The Artist https://www.theartist.me/tag/cartoons/ Art, Design, and Popular Culture Stories Sat, 21 Oct 2023 16:46:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.theartist.me/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-fav-32x32.png Famous art stories on cartoons theme | The Artist https://www.theartist.me/tag/cartoons/ 32 32 The Power of Pop Art https://www.theartist.me/art/power-of-pop-art/ Mon, 28 Aug 2023 17:00:30 +0000 http://theartist.me/?p=4452 Popular culture was shrouding everything in the 1950’s and 60’s in America, and maintaining the status quo became more important than ever. The power of pop art has been emerging since then and continuously breaking all conformist perspectives of art The post-war era seems old fashioned to us now, but at that time, humanity was [...]

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Popular culture was shrouding everything in the 1950’s and 60’s in America, and maintaining the status quo became more important than ever. The power of pop art has been emerging since then and continuously breaking all conformist perspectives of art

The post-war era seems old fashioned to us now, but at that time, humanity was experiencing life in ways that adults of the time could not have even conceived of as children. With a new world, came new perspectives, new attitudes, and new lingo. How else to describe the visual expression of the era than to use that lingo?

Lawrence Alloway, a British art critic, did just that when he coined the term POP- art in reference to art that mimicked consumerism and popular culture.

The world had become so super conformist that every house, yard, and even personal appearance looked the same.

Advertising was pervasive and marketed to the public false images of lives they were trying so hard to emulate but never could. The result was an undercurrent running through most of the households that were resulting in increased alcoholism in men and nervous breakdowns and dependence on pills in women.

Adults of the era had grown up on hard work and very little comfort during the depression but now they had machines that did work for them and convenience products that seemed to come from abundance they didn’t know what to do with.

Famous Pop Art
Famous Pop Art

The avant-garde thinkers, the beatniks, and social activists in the nation’s cultural hubs took notice of the hypocrisy of idealized images, television programs, and adored celebrities that the public was trying so hard to imitate. They saw current trends as homogenization and suffocation of humanity, innovation, and creativity. They began to attempt to expose the absurdity of conformity.

Pop Art Simplified

Artists, primarily from Britain and America, started creating art using the very items and mediums that pop culture had been using to manipulate the masses into complacency and mass consumerism. The bold primary colors and simple graphics of the era’s packaging designs, and often the packages themselves, were used to create pieces that are well known today, such as Brillo boxes and Campbell’s Soup cans. It was a complete departure and almost the very opposite of the other giant art movement of the day – Abstract Expressionism.

Whereas abstract artists sought to let the medium control the image, such as in Pollock’s drops of paint, Pop Artists went beyond realism into reality.

While abstract expressionists used their work to draw out of the viewer an acknowledgment of the tragedies of the post-war, post-depression era, pop artists were revealing the effects of the trauma of recent decades in the trends of the current time. The effect was poignant, revolutionary, and exposed the fragility of emotional façade.

Pop artists worked in imitation, using the graphic styles of the era, the format of popular comics, and the expressions of popular fashion models and celebrities to convey their messages. Though it was an imitation, it was not collage – these were seasoned artists whose talents for more detailed work were previously known. They achieved the look of these works with silk screening and even paint.

As pop artist Roy Lichtenstein put it, “Pop Art looks out into the world. It doesn’t look like a painting of something; it looks like the thing itself.” The first pop artist, Richard Hamilton, defined pop art in the irony and wit of pop art itself: “Pop Art is: popular, transient, expendable, low-cost, mass-produced, young, witty, sexy, gimmicky, glamorous, and Big Business.

Pop-art pieces were not mere reproductions of objects and advertisements. Each piece was infused with clever wit, irony, and a subtle message that became apparent to the observer. Sometimes it was revealed through the isolation of the item from its usual environment, and sometimes it was more obvious with text or contextual clues.

TAKKA TAKKA

The essence and complete elements of pop art are found in Roy Lichtenstein’s TAKKA TAKKA; a piece done in the style of a cartoon with the sound effect “takka takka” resonating with the firing of a machine gun.

Cartoons of the time, especially in this style, were meant to be either funny or swashbuckling and heroic. By using this backdrop to convey his message, Lichtenstein has the advantage of juxtaposition to make the effect more jarring and thought-provoking.

Takka Takka
Takka Takka

The limited palette and the absence of the soldiers mentioned make them up the close placement of the violent booming of the gun jolting to the viewer. The effect is that the viewer, having read the text, is left wondering about the feelings of not only the soldiers but of the victims.

The post-war era had lifted up America as heroic and the war efforts as “the right thing to do” but it had ignored the individual soldier and the effects of war on bodily health and the psyche of often very young soldiers. A pat on the back, a firm handshake, and “Good job, Son” were often given as an acknowledgement of manhood and loyalty, but brushed under the rug shell shock, moral dilemma, and the questioning of authority. This work brings all of this into focus and hints at an unseen character in the painting: the establishment that created the scenario – the governments that made it happen for these individuals, both soldier and victim.

In this, Lichtenstein achieves the major essence of pop art itself in exposing the very most conformist society – the military, in which there are not supposed to be any individuals, where free thought and expression are not only not allowed but are suppressed through control and domination. This painting was created in 1962 – the eve of America’s involvement in Viet Nam, just when people were beginning to wonder about the purpose of war and to question the morality of it.

Add to this the colors the artist chose – colors that evoke violence, uniformity, and cold steel ambivalence toward the atrocities of war. The sound effect text laid out in the color of blood, screaming “TAKKA TAKKA” and the captioned text that mimics the hero-worshipping and patriotized rhetoric of a news media that glossed over the terrifying and devastating scenes of real battle.

Power of Pop Art
Power of Pop Art

Critics point to an alternative, additional perspective on the story told in this painting, one that brings focus to the fact that with no gunner visible, there is no humanity in war, nothing to give the story portrayed an ounce of emotional thought. In this alternative, it is victims that are center stage in the mind, that do not share in the heroics of the battering charge of the takka takka bullet barrage.

No matter which of the two perspectives the viewer experiences, or any other perspective, Lichtenstein achieves the power of pop art in this piece. A simple image, in spare colors and lines, reminiscent of the benign templates of popular culture very simply and effectively creates a story in the viewer’s mind that reaches a complexity far beyond what is painted on the canvas.

Pop Art Popular in the New Millennium

Since the 1950’s and 60’s when pop art emerged, people have been trying to retain and even advance their own individuality. Unfortunately, governments, businesses, and media have worked to discourage the need for personal expression and we are still surrounded by popular imagery, mass consumerism, and homogenized thought.

This battle between the individual and the establishment has made the continuation of pop art more relevant than ever. The movement evolves with the times and the messages are braver and rendered more boldly than ever before.

Through an increased array of mediums, especially digital, and with a wider global audience, current pop art inspires and encourages thought in modern viewers with the same bright energy it began with. Viewers today are encouraged by artists such as Takashi Murakami, Yoshitomo Naraserve, and the ever-innovative Banksy, to think about how they are affected by the conformity of culture and to recognize and retain their own identity against all consumerist odds.

We love Pop Art!

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Infographics : A Brief History and Introduction to Comics https://www.theartist.me/design/history-of-comics-cartoons-infographics/ Fri, 23 Aug 2019 08:11:10 +0000 http://theartist.me/?p=4409 With comic book movies killing it at the box office and both major publishers doing a reboot in the same decade, comics are more relevant than ever. Despite the fact that they are so popular today, very few people seem to know where comics come from and how they have developed over the years.  Let’s [...]

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With comic book movies killing it at the box office and both major publishers doing a reboot in the same decade, comics are more relevant than ever. Despite the fact that they are so popular today, very few people seem to know where comics come from and how they have developed over the years.  Let’s have a look a brief history of comics through eight critical historical milestones of this medium.

History of Comics - Infographics
History of Comics – Infographics

Mainstream comics are still going strong and are gaining more and more popular because people are getting interested thanks to the wide plethora of movies, video games, and TV series we see. A few historical events have forever changed the course of the medium, which is always interesting to behold.

What would’ve comics looked like today if people hadn’t embraced the superhero concept? What kind of comics would we be reading? Would there still be comics at all?

Based on the fact that the industry has been so resilient over the years and is still here, we would say that it’s entirely possible. We can’t wait to see what will happen next.

A Brief History and Introduction to Comics

The history of comics can be traced all the way back to the 17th century after the invention of the printing press.

However, what we today recognize as a comic strip would not appear until the 19th century with the publication of The Glasgow Looking Glass, which is considered the first comic strip.

Indeed, there is an argument to be had, but one cannot deny the fact that it contains all elements we know, love, and recognize from modern comics – it incorporates satire, uses caricature, employs the use of thought bubbles, and is a continuous narrative represented through a series of pictures with captions.

A bit later satirical drawings that became more and more popular, appearing in newspapers and magazines, got the name “cartoons” during the 1840s.

Ally Sloper’s Half Holiday was the first serialized comics that featured a recurring character. It appeared in Judy, a British humor magazine, in 1867, and was created by C.H. Ross and illustrated by his wife, Emilie de Tessier.

Comics started to slowly grow in popularity and the industry started to thrive in the 1920s and 1930s. The Adventures of Tintin was born in Belgium, coming straight out of the mind of Georges Prosper Remi, more widely known as Herge.

In the meantime, in Britain, The Dandy and The Beano also opened the market to children through childish humor and storylines.

In 1938, Adventure Comics #1 launched with the superhero known as Superman on its cover. That was the year that completely changed the course and direction of comic books forever.

This is the direction we’re still following to this day.

Everything you see on the big screen right now stems from the popularity of the character at that time.

He served to define the genre of American comic books. It’s true that the genre saw a dip in sales and popularity in the 50s, but it quickly reclaimed its positions in the 60s.

In May 1939, Detective Comics #27 brought another genre-defining character to life – Batman.

Soon after, many other comic book characters would be created, which would give birth to the entire multiversity. Thus the Golden Age of comic books had begun.

During the Golden Age, comic books thrived. Comic books provided cost-effective entertainment and were popular among many different age groups. However, after World War II, there was a great dip in the popularity of superheroes.

While the most popular characters like Batman and Superman continued to sell, many others that hadn’t been established yet (like Green Lantern and the Flash) at the time were canceled.

The industry still expanded through different science fiction titles, such as Mystery in Space.

The industry saw some problems in the 50s. The numbers started to take a dip because of several factors.

Many believed that comic books actually caused juvenile delinquency, which caused problems and controversy.

Sales suffered from all the scandals, and Comics Code Authority, which was established with the aim of reducing juvenile delinquency and other problems caused by comic books, didn’t help.

In the mid-50s many people blamed comics for different youth-related problems. Parent groups help public comic book burnings to do away with comics. There were even bans in some cities. The industry took a huge hit.

Around the same time, TV was also an emerging form of entertainment, which competed with comic books for the time viewers. TV was innovative, fresh, and interesting, not because the programs were so good (the story-arcs in comic books at the time were far more interesting), but simply because it was a relatively new technology coming to the public.

The industry managed to persevere, though. The mid-fifties (1956, to be more precise), saw the beginning of the Silver Age. Many scholars believe that the rebirth of the Flash in Showcase #4 also gave the birth of the new age.

The Silver Age would be characterized by a new type of superheroes.

In 1961, Stan Lee and Jack Kirby created the Fantastic Four, which, despite the atrocious movies we’re now forced to watch, is one of the most influential comics of that time. For the first time, superheroes were humanized and given inner demons to fight and conquer, aside from the villains.

This was considered a revolution at the time because it hadn’t been done before. This made superheroes like Spider-man, Fantastic Four, and the X-Men a lot more relatable, especially among college students who could relate to the heroes and the problems they were facing.

The 1970s would (figuratively speaking) give birth to the Bronze Age of comics.

The transition wasn’t as sharp as the one between Gold and Silver Age and not all characters entered it at the same time. The timing is also quite speculative, though it’s widely accepted among fans and scholars.

The Bronze Age brought a lot more substance to the comics.

They began to provide social commentary and tried to tackle popular issues at the time, such as drug abuse. During the Bronze Age, we also so the revamping of some characters with some more serious and darker undertones.

The industry was thriving again and even saw the birth of the first specialized comic book stores.

The darker undertones that started with the Bronze Age transitioned in the Modern Age.

The creation of Alan Moore’s Watchmen and Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns served to cement this. Both comics were critically acclaimed and saw huge sales.

In fact, they are among the most influential comics to this day. The darker tone of DC’s cinematic universe can be traced to the success of those comics, and the director of Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (which is loosely based on Miller’s masterpiece) is the same director who brought Watchmen to life on the big screen – Zach Snyder.

The popularity of antiheroes like Wolverine and the Punisher began to grow because of this.

Mainstream comics are still going strong and are gaining more and more popular because people are getting interested thanks to the wide plethora of movies, video games, and TV series we see.

A few historical events have forever changed the course of the medium, which is always interesting to behold.

What would’ve comics looked like today if people hadn’t embraced the superhero concept?

What kind of comics would we be reading?

Would there still be comics at all?

Based on the fact that the industry has been so resilient over the years and is still here, we would say that it’s entirely possible. We can’t wait to see what will happen next.

The post Infographics : A Brief History and Introduction to Comics appeared first on The Artist.

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