Richard Hamilton: Just what is it that makes today's homes so different?, 1956 - on Art WW I

picture

 SOLD


 
Richard Hamilton:
Just what is it that makes today's homes so different?, 1956

Unmounted (ref: 9628)

Signed

Print, digitally remastered in colour in 1992

17.6 x 26.7 cm

Tags: Richard Hamilton print allegory interiors men women



Provenance: Private Collection


Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing? was created in 1956 for the catalogue of the exhibition This Is Tomorrow in London, (August 9–September 9)  featuring principally the interdisciplinary ICA Independent Group, including early examples of Pop Art.  Originally it was reproduced in black and white; addition, the piece was used in posters for the exhibit. Hamilton and his friends John McHale and John Voelcker had collaborated to create the room that became the best-known part of the exhibition.

IN 1956  Britain switched on its first nuclear power station - Calder Hall

The 56 Group was founded, to promote modernist art in Wales. Subsequently renamed 56 Group Wales.

The biographical film Lust for Life with Kirk Douglas portraying Vincent van Gogh and Anthony Quinn as Paul Gauguin was released.

Le mystère Picasso, a French documentary film, showed Pablo Picasso in the act of creating paintings for the camera (which he subsequently destroys so that they will exist only on film).

Jim Ede settled at Kettle's Yard, Cambridge, England.

Edward Seago joined a tour of the Antarctic.

Two attacks were  made on Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa in the Louvre, Paris.


ARTWORKS CREATED IN 1956:

Laurence Bradshaw – Monument to Karl Marx at Highgate Cemetery, London (including bronze bust)

Alexander Calder – Red Mobile

Frank Cadogan Cowper – The Golden Bowl

Salvador Dalí – Living Still Life

Max Ernst – L’oiseau Rose

Richard Hamilton – Just What Is It that Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing? (collage)

Roy Lichtenstein – Ten Dollar Bill (lithograph)

L. S. Lowry – The Floating Bridge

Joan Mitchell — Café

Norman Rockwell – The Scoutmaster


Cecile Walton, (b. 1891); Marie Laurencin,  (b. 1883), Jackson Pollock, (b. 1912);  Jean Metzinger, (b. 1883) and Nina Hamnett,  (b. 1890) all died in 1956.



Share on instagram    Share on Twitter  Share on Google +  Share on Pinterest  Share by mail