Roy Lichtenstein

Roy Lichtenstein in 1967 at the Stedelijk Museum, standing in front of one of his paintings. ©Ruud Hoff/ ANP

Roy Lichtenstein (1923 -1997), a pivotal figure in the pop art movement, built his innovative career on imitation. Starting in the early 1960s, he borrowed images from comic books and advertisements, later expanding to everyday objects, artistic styles, and art history. Richard Hamilton noted Lichtenstein’s ability to treat subjects equally, saying, “Parthenon, Picasso or Polynesian maiden are reduced to the same kind of cliché.”

Lichtenstein’s 1961 work, Girl with Ball, marked a departure from his abstract style and the art world’s prevailing tastes. He recalled that commercial art and cartooning were not yet accepted as legitimate art subjects. Lichtenstein meticulously copied source images by hand, adjusted compositions, and traced sketches onto canvas using a projector.

Using perforated templates, he replicated and exaggerated Ben-Day dots, a signature element of his style, integrating mechanical reproduction into fine art. His process involved reducing color palettes to primaries, eliminating details, and emphasizing contrasts and graphic codes of commercial imagery. In Drowning Girl, for instance, he modified the text and cropped the original scene, enhancing the damsel-in-distress narrative.

Lichtenstein later explored high art’s aesthetic clichés. In works like Brushstroke he parodied Abstract Expressionism’s autographic mark-making, transforming grand gestures into commercial and reproducible depictions. He said, “Visible brushstrokes in a painting convey a sense of grand gesture; but in my hands, the brushstroke becomes a depiction of a grand gesture.”

Art history remained a rich source for Lichtenstein. His Cathedral Series and Haystack Series reinterpreted Monet’s motifs with Ben-Day dots, industrializing Impressionism. In his Artist’s Studio series, he included references to artists like Matisse and even his own work, beginning a practice of self-quotation.

In 1992, Lichtenstein expanded his style into a room-sized canvas, Interior with Mobile, creating an artificial, yet seemingly real space. Throughout his career, he blurred boundaries between reality and artificiality, high art and mass culture, and manual and mechanical processes, revealing their interdependence

Selected available works

No selected available works for this artist.

Roy Lichtenstein – Sweet Dreams Baby! – 1965

Screenprint on heavy, smooth, white wove paper

Edition of 200

95.6 × 70.2 cm

Roy Lichtenstein – Crying Girl – 1963

Offset Lithograph on light weight off white wove paper

This work is hand signed by Roy Lichtenstein (New York, 1923 – New York, 1997) in pencil in the lower right margin
45.7 × 61 cm

Roy Lichtenstein – Shipboard Girl – 1965

Offset lithograph printed in colors

68.6 × 50.8 cm

Roy Lichtenstein | Shipboard Girl

Offset lithograph printed in colors.

68.6 × 50.8 cm

Roy Lichtenstein | Sweet Dreams Baby!

Screenprint on heavy, smooth, white wove paper.

Edition of 200.

95.6 × 70.2 cm

Roy Lichtenstein | Crying Girl

Offset Lithograph on light weight off white wove paper.
This work is from an unnumbered edition.

This work is hand signed by Roy Lichtenstein (New York, 1923 – New York, 1997) in pencil in the lower right margin.
45.7 × 61 cm

Roy Lichtenstein in 1967 at the Stedelijk Museum, standing in front of one of his paintings. ©Ruud Hoff/ ANP

Studio photos

No catalogues available for this artist.

Contact form