that the age of mass media would enable everyone to become fa-
mous for 15 minutes. His own fame has lasted much longer.
CLAES OLDENBURG The Swedish-born Pop artist Claes
Oldenburg(b. 1929) has produced sculptures that incisively com-
ment on American consumer culture. His early works consisted of
reliefs of food and clothing items. Oldenburg constructed these
sculptures of plaster layered on chicken wire and muslin, painting
them with cheap commercial house enamel. In later works, focused
on the same subjects, he shifted to large-scale stuffed sculptures of
sewn vinyl or canvas. Examples of both types of sculptures appear in
the photograph (FIG. 36-26) of his one-person show at the Green
Gallery in New York in 1962. Oldenburg had included many of the
works in this exhibition in an earlier show he mounted titled The
Store—an appropriate comment on the function of art as a com-
modity in a consumer society. Over the years, Oldenburg’s sculpture
has become increasingly monumental. In recent decades, he and his
wife and collaborator, Dutch American Coosje van Bruggen (b.
1942), have become particularly well known for their mammoth
outdoor sculptures of familiar, commonplace objects, such as cue
balls, shuttlecocks, clothespins, and torn notebooks.
Superrealism
Like the Pop artists, the artists associated with Superrealism sought a
form of artistic communication that was more accessible to the pub-
lic than the remote, unfamiliar visual language of the Abstract Ex-
pressionists, Post-Painterly Abstractionists, and Minimalists. The
Superrealists expanded Pop’s iconography in both painting and
sculpture by making images in the late 1960s and 1970s involving
scrupulous fidelity to optical fact. Because many Superrealists used
photographs as sources for their imagery, art historians also refer to
this postwar art movement as Photorealism.
AUDREY FLACKAmerican artist Audrey Flack(b. 1931) was
one of Superrealism’s pioneers. Her paintings, such as Marilyn (FIG.
36-27), were not simply technical exercises in recording objects in
minute detail but were also conceptual inquiries into the nature of
photography and the extent to which photography constructs an
understanding of reality. Flack observed that “[photography is] my
whole life, I studied art history, it was always photographs, I never saw
the paintings, they were in Europe....Look at TV and at magazines
36-26Claes Oldenburg,various works
exhibited at the Green Gallery, New York,
1962.
Oldenburg’s painted plaster and stuffed
vinyl sculptures magnify familiar items of
American consumer culture. The title of one
of his shows, The Store,was a comment on
art itself as a commodity.
36-27Audrey Flack,Marilyn,1977. Oil over acrylic on canvas,
8 8 . University of Arizona Museum, Tucson (museum purchase with
funds provided by the Edward J. Gallagher Jr. Memorial Fund).
Flack’s pioneering Photorealist still lifes record objects with great
optical fidelity. Marilynalludes to Dutch vanitas paintings (FIG. 25-21)
and incorporates multiple references to the transience of life.
Painting and Sculpture, 1945 to 1970 985
1 ft.
36-26A
OLDENBURG,
Lipstick on
Caterpillar
Tracks,1969.
36-26BSAINT-
PHALLE, Black
Venus,
1965–1967.