Collection: Pop, Op & Contemporary

Pop, Op, and Contemporary covers the broad postwar visual culture from the mid-1950s onward, when painters and designers turned away from Abstract Expressionist gesture toward graphic legibility, optical pattern, and the commercial vocabulary of mass culture. The category groups several distinct movements that share a postwar break with the gestural abstraction of the New York School and a renewed interest in image, sign, and reproduction.

Pop Art emerged first in Britain in the late 1950s through the Independent Group, including Richard Hamilton and Eduardo Paolozzi, before reaching its public peak in the United States in the early 1960s. American Pop took commercial advertising, comic strips, and consumer packaging as its primary subject matter. Andy Warhol's silkscreen Marilyn Monroe portraits of 1962 and his Campbell's Soup Cans of the same year defined the movement's most influential graphic strategy. Roy Lichtenstein adapted the comic-strip panel; James Rosenquist worked from billboard imagery; Claes Oldenburg made monumental sculptures of everyday objects.

Op Art emerged in parallel in the early 1960s, focused on optical illusion and perceptual instability through precisely calibrated geometric pattern. The 1965 Museum of Modern Art exhibition The Responsive Eye, curated by William C. Seitz, gave the movement its public name. Bridget Riley in Britain and Victor Vasarely in France anchored the field. Photorealism developed at the close of the decade, taking the photograph itself as source material and rendering it at exhibition scale, with Chuck Close and Richard Estes as its principal practitioners.

Abstract Expressionism preceded these movements as the dominant New York School idiom of the 1940s and 1950s, in the work of Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, and Willem de Kooning. The principal sub-movements grouped here include Pop Art, Op Art, Photorealism, Minimalism, and Abstract Expressionism.