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Recognized as a major Pop artist in his day, Allan Dâ¿Arcangelo (1930â¿1998) has yet to receive the critical reevaluation of painters like Roy Lichtenstein and James Rosenquist. His first monograph in nearly a decade introduces new audiences to his iconic paintings, particularly his celebrated visions of life on the road. Like Pop peers Andy Warhol and Ed Ruscha, Allan Dâ¿Arcangelo incorporated mass-manufactured images in works that elevate scenes of everyday American life. While his work often features imagery from more familiar 1960s artâ¿Jacqueline Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe, smoking pin-up girls, Superman, Lucky Strikeâ¿it differs in the surreal elements he introduced to Pop tropes and romantic views of the American industrial landscape. Dâ¿Arcangelo once observed his âmost profound experiences of landscape were looking through the windshield.â? The artist brought a Pop sensibility to the tradition of landscape painting in a graphic style that touched on Minimalism, Precisionism, and Hard-edge painting. Often framed from the perspective of the driverâ¿s seat, Dâ¿Arcangeloâ¿s work captures the deeply American experience of flying down an endless road. Dâ¿Arcangeloâ¿s signature scrolling landscape cut through with flashing signs is as familiar to road trippers as it is to video game racers. This comprehensive publication includes over 200 reproductions and three essays detailing what critic Dore Ashton describes as the âpoetic awareness of the vastnesses both visible and invisible in American life [that] marked and distinguished [Dâ¿Arcangeloâ¿s] work.â? This book is edge stained.
"Alex J. Taylor's excellent and richly revealing Forms of Persuasion returns to the topic of art's relationship to capitalism in the 1960s to uncover things most scholars have preferred to ignore--Warhol's quiet acceptance of commissions, Big Tobacco's willful organization of touring shows, and many corporations' canny acquisition of abstract art for branding purposes. Through a wealth of fascinating stories, Taylor shows all the moves in the delicate dance shared by artists and corporate chiefs in a period of dissent."--Joshua Shannon, author of The Recording Machine: Art and Fact during the Cold War "Challenging long-accepted verities about the nature of corporate sponsorship, Alex J. Taylor presents a series of shifting paradigms that reveal how the relationship between business and art was transformed by the end of the 1960s. This powerful book will reinvigorate the discussion of a phenomenon central to art culture until this day."--Nancy J. Troy, author of The Afterlife of Piet Mondrian
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