• Lichtenstein on the Roof – Harriet Zinnes

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Lichtenstein on the Roof

    Harriet Zinnes

    To view art from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden of the Metropolitan
    Museum of Art simply doubles the joy of viewing. Before one is the open sky in
    the 10,000-square-foot open air space where uniquely tall buildings of the world
    become airy decorative objects through spectacular views of Central Park and
    the New York City skyline, and near one are sculptures reinforcing one’s
    amazement at man’s triumphant imagination. And now, through November 2,
    2003 (weather permitting) are six sculptures by the American artist Roy Lichtenstein
    (1923-1997).

    Here are works
    that Lichtenstein created in the l990s. What is special about them is that the
    artist through the sculptures makes allusions to his own earlier work or to the
    work of such artists as Picasso and Brancusi. They are works characteristic of
    Lichtenstein. Always with some kind of wit – consider “Coup de Chapeau
    11” with its reference to cartoons — and never without large-scale
    brushstrokes and bright, exuberant colors, the sculptures do honor to the artist.
    Here exhibited for the first time in New York is the house that, yes, Lichtenstein
    “built.” The curator, Jack Cowart, who is head of the Lichtenstein
    Foundation, actually had the house landscaped with a bit of grass and stones
    to give it a sense of reality, for it is a kind of skeleton of a house, with
    front and back facades and windows (all with the black strokes of the artist)
    and no real domestic solidity.

    There are usually
    painterly effects on the sculptures – and this eminent sculptor had painted
    in his early days. One can see them in the l993 “Brushstroke Nude”
    with its evidence of baroque effects or in “Endless Drip” (probably
    an allusion to Brancusi’s “Endless Column”). This work of painted
    and fabricated aluminun demonstrates this sculptor’s emphasis on the very
    physicality of paint itself.

    A very special show offering the additional scenes of the very special New York
    City skyline.

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