Tom Wesselmann Pop Artwork for Sale
Tom
Wesselmann was born on February 23, 1931, in Cleveland, Ohio, and
attended university before serving in the Korean War during the early
1950s. While overseas he began to craft cartoons, and upon his return to
the States he earned a psychology degree from the University of
Cincinnati. He then enrolled at the Art Academy of Cincinnati and later
the Cooper Union in New York City, finishing his studies by the late
1950s.
Pop artist Tom
Wesselmann died on December 17, 2004, in New York, after heart surgery,
and was survived by his wife Claire and three children. Wesselmann died
on December 17, 2004, in New York, after heart surgery, and was survived
by his wife Claire and three children.
“New
York lit him on fire,” saidTom Wesselmann ‘s second wife, Claire—a
fellow Cooper Union student and model for her husband—about the city’s
creative scene at that time. Having presumed he would continue cartoon
work, Wesselmann was inspired by innovative exhibitions to go in a new
direction and worked as a collagist, having initial showings at the
Tanager and Green galleries by the early ’60s.
He
began to create art that incorporated commonplace real-world items with
historical portraiture, often focusing on a reclining female nude.
Hence he became known for his “Great American Nude” series, linked to
more classical works. Due to his particular aesthetic, he was seen,
along with figures like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, as one of the
purveyors of Pop Art, though Wesselmann stated that he didn’t care for
the term. Later in the decade his pieces were exhibited in Europe and
Brazil.
During the ’70s,
Wesselmann completed his “Nude” series and went down a specific path
with his “Standing Still Life” paintings, which featured objects such as
keys and a toothbrush magnified to larger-than-life scale on canvas. He
also became known for the “Smokers” series, zeroing in on disembodied
presentations of hands and lips, and his “Bedroom Painting” art, with
close-ups of objects, forms and faces in vivid color.
Having
become an established international artist who was also known for his
printmaking, Wesselmann later played with ideas around sculpture and
metalwork. In the new millennium he returned to the nude figure, this
time in a more abstract sense though continuing his use of an electric
palette.
Wesselmann died on
December 17, 2004, in New York, after heart surgery, and was survived by
his wife Claire and three children. Wesselmann had published his
autobiography in 1980, using the alias Slim Stealingworth. Published
retrospectives include Tom Wesselmann: His Voice and Visionfrom Rizzoli
International and Wesselmann from Prestel Publishing.
Inquire
on prices to buy Tom Wesselmann works, prints, still life paintings,
artworks for sale at Guy Hepner Contemporary Art Gallery.
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