File:Wally Hedrick Flag 1953 18 x 14".jpg

Wally_Hedrick_Flag_1953_18_x_14".jpg(363 × 274 pixels, file size: 31 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

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Description Peace (1953)

In 1953, one of the earliest paintings of his career as an artist presented a crumpled American flag defaced with the word 'Peace'. Thomas E. Crow contrasts this work with Jasper Johns’s "anonymous stenciling", drawing attention to the way Hedrick mimics the flamboyant calligraphy found in the decoration of hot-rod cars.[1] Crow sees the work in contrast to Johns’s reticence, as a protest aimed against the waste of lives in Korea, and at Cold War adventurism in general.[1] Additionally, Peace (1953), "demonstrates an intuitive understanding of 'language as symbol' which predates the present postmodern use (of language) by twenty years.[2] Hedrick’s pre-pop paintings were included in John Coplan’s historical “Pop Art, USA," the first exhibition to attempt a collective look at the movement in the United States, presented at the Oakland Art Museum during September, 1963.[3] Even after his Pop Art phase, Hedrick continued "his risk-taking forays into regions where, mostly, angels fear to tread".[4]

Author or
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Wally Hedrick
Source (WP:NFCC#4) Website: Contemporary Art Daily
Date of publication http://www.contemporaryartdaily.com/2013/01/painting-at-the-box/2012_painting_hedrick-peace-1953/
Use in article (WP:NFCC#7) Wally Hedrick
Purpose of use in article (WP:NFCC#8) To support encyclopedic discussion of this work in this article. The illustration is specifically needed to support the following point(s):

Wally Hedrick > Peace (1953) full section of article

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Other information Wally Hedrick, Flag, circa 1953, Oil on canvas, 18 x 14", Paul McCarthy, Los Angeles, CA.

Peace (1953) In 1953, one of the earliest paintings of his career as an artist presented a crumpled American flag defaced with the word 'Peace'. Thomas E. Crow contrasts this work with Jasper Johns’s "anonymous stenciling", drawing attention to the way Hedrick mimics the flamboyant calligraphy found in the decoration of hot-rod cars.[1] Crow sees the work in contrast to Johns’s reticence, as a protest aimed against the waste of lives in Korea, and at Cold War adventurism in general.[1] Additionally, Peace (1953), "demonstrates an intuitive understanding of 'language as symbol' which predates the present postmodern use (of language) by twenty years.[2] Hedrick’s pre-pop paintings were included in John Coplan’s historical “Pop Art, USA," the first exhibition to attempt a collective look at the movement in the United States, presented at the Oakland Art Museum during September, 1963.[3] Even after his Pop Art phase, Hedrick continued "his risk-taking forays into regions where, mostly, angels fear to tread".[4]

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current06:02, 28 November 2014Thumbnail for version as of 06:02, 28 November 2014363 × 274 (31 KB)Theo's Little Bot (talk | contribs)Reduce size of non-free image (BOT - disable)
16:16, 27 November 2014No thumbnail600 × 454 (120 KB)Ratbastardassn (talk | contribs)Uploading a non-free work, as object of commentary using File Upload Wizard
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