2. pop art clay teapots

38
Pop-Art Clay Teapots

Transcript of 2. pop art clay teapots

Page 1: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop-Art Clay Teapots

Page 2: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Art

• Typically used images from:– Pop culture– Mass media– Advertising– News/current events

Page 3: 2. pop art clay teapots

Crying Girl, Roy Lichtenstein; 1964; Pop Art; Enamel on Steel

POP CULTURE

Page 4: 2. pop art clay teapots

Untitled from Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn); Andy Warhol; 1967; Pop Art; Screen Print

MASS MEDIA

Page 5: 2. pop art clay teapots

Campbell's Soup I; Andy Warhol; 1968; Pop Art; Screen Print

ADVERTISING

Page 6: 2. pop art clay teapots

Signs; Robert Rauschenberg; 1970; Conceptual Art; Collage

CURRENT EVENTS

Page 7: 2. pop art clay teapots

Assignment

• Design a teapot that focuses on something specific from any of these areas:– Pop Culture (i.e. Hello Kitty, Sesame Street, Sporting

Teams, etc.)– Mass Media (i.e. Lady Gaga, Jay-Z, or other

musicians/actors)– Advertising (i.e. Brand names like Kraft, appropriate

skateboard logos, clothing brands, etc.)– News/Current Events (i.e. Supreme court trials,

elections, natural disasters, national relations, etc.)

Page 8: 2. pop art clay teapots

Assignment Continued

• Your teapot must communicate the imagery clearly; the viewer should know what images your teapot consists of, as well as what message you’re trying to send by creating this teapot

• Think about whether you want your teapot to be FUNCTIONAL or METAPHORICAL (either is allowed!!!)

Page 9: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pay Attention!!!

• Some of the images you are about to see are not actually teapots, but they could easily be altered to look like teapots (they DON’T have to be functional!)

Page 10: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 11: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 12: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 13: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 14: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 15: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 16: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 17: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 18: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture

Page 19: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture (Pusheen)

Page 20: 2. pop art clay teapots

Pop Culture: Bob’s Burgers

Page 21: 2. pop art clay teapots

Advertisement? Coca Cola

Page 22: 2. pop art clay teapots

Mass Media: Alice in Wonderland

Page 23: 2. pop art clay teapots

Mass Media: Alice in Wonderland

Page 24: 2. pop art clay teapots

Mass Media: Alice in Wonderland

Page 25: 2. pop art clay teapots

Mass Media: Alice in Wonderland

Page 26: 2. pop art clay teapots

Advertising

Page 27: 2. pop art clay teapots

Advertising Food/Farming/Organics

Page 28: 2. pop art clay teapots

Advertising: Go Green

Page 29: 2. pop art clay teapots

Advertising: Go Green

Page 30: 2. pop art clay teapots

How could this be representative of News/Current Events?

Page 31: 2. pop art clay teapots

Steampunk (sci-fi/horror/alternate technologies set in alternate historical settings) i.e. the movie, “Wild Wild West”

Pop Culture? Mass Media? Advertisement? Political/Current Events?

Page 32: 2. pop art clay teapots

OTMS Student Example

Page 33: 2. pop art clay teapots

OTMS Student Example

Page 34: 2. pop art clay teapots

OTMS Student Example

Page 35: 2. pop art clay teapots

OTMS Student Example

Page 36: 2. pop art clay teapots

OTMS Student Example

Page 37: 2. pop art clay teapots

My Example

Page 38: 2. pop art clay teapots

Final Note:

• You will not be sculpting a pop icon “AS IS”– For example, if you want to make a Simpson’s

teapot, you will not just sculpt Simpsons characters as they are…

• You still need to add your own twist! You are Appropriating images: borrowing them, but I still expect you to use your own brain to do something creative with those images!!!