Let’s Meet Many Famous Artists
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7Let’s Meet
Many Famous Artists

“Hopeless” by Roy Lichtenstein is a good
example from which time period in art history?

Figure 34-30 ROY LICHTENSTEIN, Hopeless, 1963. Oil on canvas, 3’ 8” x 3’ 8”. Kunstmuseum, Basel (permanent loan from the Ludwig Foundation Collection).

Marilyn, 1962. Oil, acrylic,
and silk-screen
enamel on canvas. Tate
Gallery, London.
Who is known for zeroing in on American mass production and its boring repetitions? He is famous for his paintings and prints of Campbell's soup cans and his images of Marilyn Monroe, Elvis, and other personalities.

During which historical period
was “The Scream” by Edvard Munch
painted?

The artwork pictured above is an example of which time period/style in art history:

Invisible Bust of Voltaire
Salvador Dali

What is the artistic technique used in Georges Seurat’s “Sunday on La Grande Jatte”?

Who was a Post-Impressionist who expressed his feelings and emotions in his work and is known for his painting "Starry Night"? He communicated his thoughts about creating art in letters to his brother, Theo. He was considered to be a failure during his lifetime, although his work sells for millions today.

Vincent Van Gogh
SunflowersNational Gallery, London

Who was probably the most famous artist of the twentieth century with work ranging from Expressionism to Cubism? He created many different styles of art in his long career. Some of his famous paintings include "The Three Musicians" and "Guernica ".
Guernica, 1935

Who was the Italian Renaissance artist best known for paintings such as the
"Mona Lisa" , the "Madonna of the Rocks" , and the "Last Supper" ? He used
aerial perspective to provide a greater sense of reality. He is also remembered as an inventor, engineer, anatomist, botanist,
etc. He left over 10,000 pages of notes about his thoughts and discoveries.

This artist used tessellations to visualize the concept of two different worlds existing
together at the same time.

American Gothic
He developed a painting
style called “Regionalism”

Victor VasarelyVega - Nor
This art is based on the idea that the artist can persuade the viewer to see visual illusions and the impression of movement within a painting