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Overview"Andy Warhol said about his road trip to Los Angeles in 1963: 'The farther West we drove, the more Pop everything looked on the highways'. In this original and engaging book, Cecile Whiting examines what Pop looked like when it left the highbrow cloisters of Manhattan's art galleries and ventured westward to the sprawling suburbs of Los Angeles. She finds that the artists who made California their home in the 1960s did not abandon their paint brushes for tennis rackets and surfboards, but rather created in their works a new and different sense of space, the urban experience, and popular culture. Whiting shows how artists such as Vija Celmins, Llyn Foulkes, David Hockney, Dennis Hopper, Allan Kaprow, Claes Oldenburg, Ed Ruscha, and Judy Chicago helped to shape the identity of Los Angeles as an emerging art center, while avoiding in their representation of the city the cliches of both its boosters and its detractors. Delving deep into the southern California aesthetic sensibility, ""Pop L.A."" recounts how the artists transformed the image of the city in works that focused on the ocean and landscape, suburban life, dilapidated houses in aging neighborhoods, streets and parking lots, and public buildings such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The common bond of place, for Whiting, gives coherence to the varied experiments in the visual and performance arts that altered the cultural terrain during this pivotal time. The Los Angeles art scene in the 1960s inspired a new generation of architectural writing about the metropolis and its debased sister city, Las Vegas. Over the course of the decade, the conception of the city pioneered by artists in Los Angeles spread beyond the city of angels to characterize cultural life in the United States." Full Product DetailsAuthor: Cécile WhitingPublisher: University of California Press Imprint: University of California Press Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.925kg ISBN: 9780520244603ISBN 10: 0520244605 Pages: 268 Publication Date: 06 March 2006 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsSun, surf, sand, sex, strip malls, subdivisions: all are present in Cecile Whiting's trenchant anatomy of Pop Los Angeles. And all were central to the vision artists constructed of this protean city as a site of both pleasure and emptiness, speed and stasis. Some artists, however, went further, not merely representing the city, but intervening in it, and for Whiting, the results - whether a performance by Kaprow or a tower by Rodia - further demonstrate the wild diversity of a multicentric city that somehow seems both more and less than a circumscribable place. - Anne Wagner, author of Mother Stone: The Vitality of Modern British Sculpture Pop L.A. maps the relation between a new urban and cultural space and the artists who confronted it and gave it form. - Anthony W. Lee, Mount Holyoke College, author of Picturing Chinatown Pioneering... Whiting's project will be central to any further work on West Coast art in the postwar period. --Art Journal (Caa) Author InformationCecile Whiting is Professor of Art History at the University of California, Irvine, and author of A Taste for Pop: Pop Art, Gender, and Consumer Culture (1997) and Antifascism in American Art (1989). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |