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Tom Wesselmann
From Smoker #7
Full-Cataloguing
As a former cartoonist for men's magazines, Tom Wesselmann’s main interest thoughout his career was not to draw attention to the subject but, ‘to make figurative art as exciting as abstract art’. Wesselmann reintroduces the nude in art. Yet he overloads it with a blatant eroticism whereby the artist reduces the female sitter to her elementary components and hence is able to concentrate on the formal inner qualities of the image. As the present lot brilliantly attests, Wesselmann’s ideal female form is a post-Abstract Expressionist’s one combined with the visual power of Pop constantly accompanied by an ironic guiding thread.
Tom Wesselmann
American | B. 1931 D. 2004As a former cartoonist and leading figure of the Pop Art movement, Tom Wesselmann spent many years of his life repurposing popular imagery to produce small to large-scale works that burst with color. Active at a time when artists were moving away from the realism of figurative painting and growing increasingly interested in abstraction, Wesselmann opted for an antithetical approach: He took elements of city life that were both sensual and practical and represented them in a way that mirrored Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol's own methodologies.
Wesselmann considered pop culture objects as exclusively visual elements and incorporated them in his works as pure containers of bold color. This color palette became the foundation for his now-iconic suggestive figurative canvases, often depicting reclining nudes or women's lips balancing a cigarette.