1962 in art
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Events
- February 6 – March 4 – Jane Frank, solo exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery.
- February 10
- Ervin Eisch, Lothar Fischer, Dieter Kunzelmann, Renee Nele, Heimrad Prem, Gretel Stadler, Helmut Sturm and Hans-Peter Zimmer are excluded from the Situationist International (SI).
- Roy Lichtenstein's first solo exhibition opens at Leo Castelli's gallery in New York City, including Look Mickey, featuring his first employment of Ben-Day dots, speech balloons and imagery from comics.
- March 15 – Ansgar Elde and Jørgen Nash are excluded from the Situationist International.
- April 7 – The Stanley Spencer Gallery opens in Spencer's home village of Cookham, England, to display his work.
- April 10 – Robert Fraser sets up his gallery, specializing in contemporary British art, in the Mayfair district of London.
- May – The comic book character The Incredible Hulk, created visually by Jack Kirby, is introduced.
- May–June – David Smith creates the Voltri series of abstract sculptures (e.g. Voltri XV) in Italy.
- May 25 – The new Coventry Cathedral, designed by Basil Spence, is consecrated in England; artworks incorporated include: the exterior sculpture St Michael's Victory over the Devil by Sir Jacob Epstein; the tapestry Christ in Glory in the Tetramorph, designed by Graham Sutherland; the Mater Dolorosa sculpture by John Bridgeman; the Baptistry window by John Piper and Patrick Reyntiens; and the engraved glass Screen of Saints and Angels by John Hutton.
- July 9 – Andy Warhol's first solo California gallery exhibition as a fine artist opens at the Ferus Gallery, Los Angeles, California, marking the West Coast debut of pop art and featuring his Campbell's Soup Cans.[1][2]
- July 23 – The Mohamed Mahmoud Khalil Museum is opened in Cairo.
- July 25 – The Queen's Gallery is opened to the public at Buckingham Palace, London.
- August – The comic book character Spider-Man, created visually by Steve Ditko, is introduced.
- September 25 – The Pasadena Art Museum mounts New Painting of Common Objects, a survey of contemporary American Pop Art.[3]
- October 31 – The Sidney Janis Gallery mounts International Exhibition of the New Realists, a survey of contemporary American Pop Art and the European Nouveau Réalisme movement and the first Pop Art group exhibition in an 'uptown gallery' in New York City, a rented storefront at 19 W. 57th Street, near the main gallery at 15 E. 57th Street. Robert Motherwell, Mark Rothko, Philip Guston and Adolph Gottlieb quit the Janis Gallery as a protest against the exhibition.
- November 14 – The British General Post Office issues the first commemorative stamps to be designed by David Gentleman.
- Michelangelo Pistoletto begins painting on mirrors.
- Ernst Barlach House completed as an art museum in Hamburg, Germany.
- City Hall Museum and Art Gallery established in Hong Kong.
- The Institute of American Indian Arts is set up in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
- Musashino Art University.
- National Art Museum of China opens in Beijing.
- Museo de Arte Español Enrique Larreta imaugurated in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
- The comic book character Barbarella, created by Jean-Claude Forest, is introduced in France.
Awards
Works
- Diane Arbus – Child with Toy Hand Grenade in Central Park (photograph)
- Herman Wilhelm Bissen – Iderstedter Löwe
- Alexander Calder – Sky Hooks (sculpture)
- Anthony Caro – Early One Morning (painted metal sculpture)
- Jean Dubuffet – Court les rues
- Yves Klein
- IKB 191
- Immaterial Pictorial Sensitivity
- Roy Lichtenstein
- L. S. Lowry – Station Approach
- Piero Manzoni – The Base of the World
- Henry Moore – Knife Edge Two Piece 1962–65
- Otto Muehl and followers of Viennese Actionism – Die Blutorgel (performance art)
- David Shepherd – The Wise Old Elephant
- Jeffrey Smart – Cahill Expressway
- Jean Tinguely – Study for an End of the World No. 2 (self-destroying sculpture)
- Marie Vorobieff – Homage to Friends from Montparnasse
- Andy Warhol
- Campbell's Soup Cans
- Coca-Cola (3)
- Green Coca-Cola Bottles
- Elvis
- Marilyn Diptych
- Marilyn 3 Times
- 129 DIE IN JET (Plane Crash)
- Men in Her Life
- David Wynne
- The Breath of Life Column (Hammersmith)
- John Gielgud (bronze busts)
Births
- 13 April – Chris Riddell, South African-born English children's book illustrator and political cartoonist
- 27 April – Gabriel Orozco, Mexican visual artist
- 2 May – Alexandra Boulat, French photographer (d. 2007)
- 9 May – Gary Hume, English painter
- 22 May – Hannah Mary Rothschild, English art museum board member, documentary film maker, writer and philanthropist
Deaths
- January 24 – André Lhote, French Cubist painter (b. 1885)
- March 19 – Ethel Sands, American-born English painter (b. 1873)
- April 23 – Harold Parker, Australian sculptor (b. 1873)
- May 13 – Franz Kline, American abstract expressionist painter (b. 1910)
- May 25 – Zora Petrović, one of the most significant representatives of Expressionism of color in Serbian art between two wars (b. 1894)
- June 6 – Yves Klein, French painter (b. 1928)
- September 7 – Morris Louis, American color field painter (b. 1912)
- October 17 – Natalia Goncharova, Russian avant-garde artist (b. 1881)
- December 28 – Karl Völker, German painter and architect (b. 1889)
See also
References
- ↑ Livingstone, Marco, ed. (1991). Pop Art: an International Perspective. London: Royal Academy of Arts. p. 32. ISBN 0-8478-1475-0.
- ↑ Lippard, Lucy R. (1970). Pop Art. London: Thames and Hudson. p. 158. ISBN 0-500-20052-1.
- ↑ Plagens, Peter (2000). Sunshine Muse: Art on the West Coast, 1945-1970. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 138. ISBN 0-520-22392-6.
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