7 Artists Influenced By Cartoons and Comics

In the late 1950s, Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein began hiding easter eggs in his Abstract
paintings. Before he began painting his lovelorn comic-strip girls in Ben-Day dots in the 1960s, he had Mickey Mouse on his mind. He felt compelled to include the cartoon mouse, Donald Duck, and Bugs Bunny in his compositions for the keen-eyed to spot.
Cartoons and comics would soon become the basis for his work. In 1961, Lichtenstein created the tongue-in-cheek oil painting Look Mickey, appropriated directly from a comic of Mickey and Donald. Two years later, he painted Drowning Girl (1963), riffing on a frame in the DC Comic Secret Love #83. He saw cartoons as an entry for cultural satire. I was very excited about, and interested in, the highly emotional content yet detached, impersonal handling of love, hate, war, etc. in these cartoon images,” he once said.
Artists continued to question the line between “high” and “low” culture. Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat included famous superheroes in their work, and Keith Haring adorned New York with his iconic dancing cartoons.Joyce Pensato, who passed away in June, spent her career applying Abstract Expressionist techniques to pop culture motifs, through large-scale energetic charcoal drawings of characters like Homer Simpson and Batman.
Today, there is no shortage of contemporary artists using illustrated or animated characters as source materials for their work. We present seven artists drawing inspiration from cartoons.

Yoshimoto Nara (b. 1959)

woodblock prints to create the works for which he is best known: illustrative portraits of kids, whose cuteness comes with an edge—sometimes literally, as they are prone to brandishing knives.

KAWS (b. 1974)

Kristen Liu-Wong (b. 1991)

In

Kenny Scharf (b. 1958)

Los Angeles–based painter and street artist

Takashi Murakami (b. 1962)

Tala Madani (b. 1981)

Tala Madani, Shitty Disco, 2016. © Tala Madani. Courtesy of 303 Gallery, New York.

Tala Madani, Two Fountains, 2018. © Tala Madani. Courtesy of 303 Gallery, New York.

In 2017, when

Raymond Pettibon (b. 1957)

The prolific

Source: https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-7-artists-influenced-cartoons-comics
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