Roy Lichtenstein Gallery
Roy Lichtenstein (1923-1997)
Roy was born in New York. He studied at the Art Students' League, New York, and at Ohio State University, Columbus. He taught at Ohio State University, New York State University, Oswego and Rutgers University. He did his military service in Europe. He had his first one-man exhibition in 1951 and worked as a commercial artist until 1957. He painted parodies of American twenties' art such as Remington's cowboy-and-Indian scenes. He used elements of commercial art, comics and advertisements in his drawings and painting. He produced large format paintings for the New York State Pavilion at the World's Fair in New York. He was represented at the Venice Biennale in 1966, 1968 and 1970 and in 1967-68 he had a retrospective at the Pasadena Art Museum.




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Times Square Mural   
Porcelain enamel on steel......
6 feet x 53 feet ......1994 (installed in New York City subway station, 42nd and Broadway in 2002)  

The Metropolitan Transportation Authority's Arts for Transit program commissioned Roy Lichtenstein to create a mural for the Times Square subway station. A native New Yorker who had ridden the subway since boyhood, Lichtenstein jumped at the chance to create a work of public art. So he designed a 6-foot-tall, 53-foot-long porcelain enamel futuristic vision of New York, which he decided to make a gift to the city.

Lichtenstein fabricated the mural in 1994, three years before his death. Although it was ready to be installed then, plans for the redevelopment of Times Square were delayed and the mural was put in storage, where it has been ever since. But now, to coincide with the renovation of tbe Times Square subway station, the M.T.A. is putting the work in its rightful place. On Sept. 5 it will unveil "Times Square Mural" near the main entrance at 42nd Street and Broadway.

"A half a million people a day come through the Times Square subway station," said Sandra Bloodworth, director of the Arts for Transit Program. "Roy's desire to make this gift was an example of how much he believed in the subway and in New York."

"Times Square Mural" incorporates many of the artist's signature elements, including comic-book characters and science-fiction themes. Lichtenstein also made visual references to the 1939 and 1964 New York World's Fairs. In one portion of the mural, a Buck Rogers figure steps out of a space ship, looking through the remains of a crumbling 20th-century 42nd Street subway station and onto the city of the future. An image of the original 1904 plaque of the number 42, created by Grueby Faience of Boston, one of the most important terra-cotta manufacturers at the turn of the 20th century, was also incorporated,into the artist's scheme.
GrrrrrrrrrrrPreparednessInterior with Mirrored WallStepping OutHouseKitchen stoveTimes Square Mural
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