Untitled

Catalogue

Year
1969
Dimensions
30.4 × 23.6 cm (12 × 9 5/16 in.)
Artist
Art Green

Artist

A
Art Green

Painting

Arthur Green was an American painter who was one of the original Hairy Who members from Chicago, a group of students from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago who exhibited together in the 1960s and 1970s and made representational art with a slight surrealist touch. He was also a member of the University of Waterloo's faculty for over 30 years. His style of his paintings mixes pop-art motifs with surrealist tendencies. His upbringing in Chicago and its vicinity may have influenced him, from the accessibility of the Art Institute of Chicago to the architecture of Louis Sullivan, but he also may have been influenced by advertisements from the 1940s and 1950s that had undertones of sexuality. His paintings drew from American popular imagery, but complicated it, often using the full spectrum of vibrant colors and combining trompe-l'œil effects to play with the viewer's sense of balance.

Frankfort, IN, USA

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Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

1968 · Brush and black ink on mylar, ruled in blue pencil and graphite

WW-1968-037740
Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

1968 · Brush and black ink with blue pencil and graphite on frosted Mylar

WW-1968-037743
Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

1968 · Brush and black ink on mylar, ruled in blue pencil and graphite

WW-1968-037744
Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

Untitled, from Hairy Who (color separation)

1968 · Brush and black ink on mylar, ruled in blue pencil and graphite

WW-1968-037734
Da Hairy Who Foyer - For Ya Prince

Da Hairy Who Foyer - For Ya Prince

1967 · Color screenprint on red coated paper

WW-1967-037746
Come Poze, from The Hairy Who Sideshow (color separations)

Come Poze, from The Hairy Who Sideshow (color separations)

1967 · Pen and brush and black ink and cut pieces of self-adhesive transfer tone dot film, on two layers of frosted Mylar, taped to card faced with ivory paper, ruled with graphite and blue pencil

WW-1967-037742