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Art has always played an important part in defining the culture of society, describing an individual’s thoughts, ideas, and perspectives. Its worth can be traced from framed pieces in royal homes to their devout collections in international museums. Turning away from fine art, to target popular and mass culture, Pop art never failed to amuse those who appreciate its uniqueness. Pop art drives its inspiration from comic books, advertising, celebrity icons, and mundane objects.

Pop art was first introduced in Great Britain during the 1950s and later in the United States. It was an artistic movement of the 20th century that has gained popularity among the masses. The art form started getting shaped by movie stars, musicians, and fashions, and it changed the perspective questioning if the art should be traditional, unique, or limited to some. This idea gave birth to Pop art that was quirky, fun, and reflected the popular culture. In 50s, Pop art looked like collages explaining different scenarios in a single frame, or some paintings with girls driving, getting inspiration from Archie’s comic.   

Today, Pop art has found its way into streets, offices, cafes, and homes. Whatever your choice of Pop art, you can easily convert it into a canvas print. Nowadays, artists offer unique designs, ideas, customization, and all your favorite pictures and posters into Pop art. The art can provide a live and contemporary look to your otherwise dead walls, and definitely stand apart from those usual paintings.

Here are the different types of Pop art available in the market:

Andy Warhol – The art is named after American artist, film director, and printmaker from the Pop art era. Some of his famous artworks include silkscreen paintings Campbell Soup Cans, Marilyn Diptych, Coca-Cola, and the experimental film Chelsea Girls. His distinct style consists of a multi-colored collage of identical panels, each bombarded with contrasting colors, indicating different emotions and color play in a single print.

Lichtenstein – Roy Lichtenstein named his expression of art – Lichtenstein. He initially used to borrow images from comic books and advertisements, and later resorted to images encompassing everyday objects and artistic silhouettes. He was famous for creating comic book style characterizations and had messages that ware expressed in ironic ways. In this type, one could have the images tailored into hard-hitting comics.

Glo Portrait – This art has realistic textures, bold strokes, and bright colours that help to create a distinctly authentic style of Pop art. Usually, Glo portrait strives to create an animal or individual portrait that gets completed through customizing physical traits of personality. This style is bold and articulate.