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Eduardo Paolozzi created what is widely considered the first Pop Art image, though the term wasn't coined until 1954.
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Jasper Johns created several pieces with targets as the focal point. There is some debate as to intent in doing so, but it is commonly believed that he was making a statement about judgement and observation.
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Artist Jasper Johns created this piece in 1958. It is currently on display at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York.
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John Chamberlain created this three dimensional painting of scrap metal.
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Created by Andy Warhol, whom many consider to have been the most influential artist of the Pop Art movement.
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Claes Oldenburg, considered one of the forefathers of the Pop Art movement, created this piece in 1962. Much of his work is replications of 'every day' items such as this.
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By Roy Lichtenstein's style is very reminiscent of the kind of art work you would see in a comic book.
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Wayne Theibaud
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Another piece by Roy Lichtenstein. This one sold for a whopping $42.6 million in 2010.
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Another very well known piece by Andy Warhol. The images depicted are representative of the Birmingham Race Riots of 1963, during the Civil Rights era. Very powerful piece that sold for over $62 million on May 31, 2014.
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Marisol Escobar created more than one piece titled "The Family,"that served as representations of her own family. However, this version is a representation of the Nativity scene.
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Andy Warhol painted this portrait of infamous Chinese dictator, Chairman Mao Zedong.
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Painting by David Hockney gives a glimpse into the lives of his parents with this piece.
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Artist Keith Haring
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Famed celebrity photographer, Herb Ritts snapped this well-known shot of some of the most famous supermodels of the decade in 1990. It now hangs in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
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James Rosenquist created an entire collection of oil canvases of images of gift-wrapped dolls. This is the 16th canvas and was first exhibited in 1992.
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James Rosenquist, one of the pioneers of the Pop Art movement created this piece in 1994.
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Pop Art sculpture by Japanese artist Yoshimoto Nara.
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Modern Pop Art exhibit by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama, who is also seen as one of the legends of the Pop Art movement.
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Regarded as modern Pop Art's "Rebel Queen," Ashely Longshore displayed this exhibit at Bergdoff Goodman in New York. Artists like Ashley are keeping Pop Art alive.