Los Angeles Times

Pioneer of pop art movement

‘I’m not like Andy Warhol. He did Coca-Cola bottles and Brillo pads. I used generic imagery — no brand names — to make a new kind of picture.’ —James Rosenquist, artist

- news.obits@latimes.com

Artist James Rosenquist, a key figure in the pop art movement, has died. He was 83.

Rosenquist’s wife, Mimi Thompson, told the New York Times that he died Friday in New York City after a long illness.

Rosenquist started by painting signs and billboard advertisem­ents in Times Square and other public places. He later incorporat­ed images from popular culture, such as celebritie­s and consumer goods, into his work.

One of his best-known pieces is “President Elect,” created in the early 1960s. It is a billboard-style painting depicting John F. Kennedy’s face alongside a yellow Chevrolet and a piece of cake.

“The face was from Kennedy’s campaign poster. I was very interested at that time in people who advertised themselves,” Rosenquist told the art appreciati­on organizati­on the Art Story. “Why did they put up an advertisem­ent of themselves? So that was his face. And his promise was half a Chevrolet and a piece of stale cake.”

Another popular piece was Rosenquist’s “F-111,” which superimpos­es a Vietnam War fighter-bomber on images of children and consumer goods.

Rosenquist resisted comparison­s to his contempora­ries Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenste­in.

“I’m not like Andy Warhol. He did Coca-Cola bottles and Brillo pads. I used generic imagery — no brand names — to make a new kind of picture,” Rosenquist said in a 2007 interview with Smithsonia­n magazine. “People can remember their childhood, but events from four or five years ago are in a never-never land. That was the imagery I was concerned with — things that were a little bit familiar but not things you feel nostalgic about. Hot dogs and typewriter­s — generic things people sort of recognize.”

Rosenquist was born in Grand Forks, N.D. His mother was an amateur painter who supported his creative interests early on. His watercolor of a sunset won him an art scholarshi­p to the Minneapoli­s School of Art. He later attended the University of Minnesota before moving to New York City in 1955.

In 2009, a fire destroyed several works by Rosenquist at his home and studio in Aripeka, Fla. It was the same year he released his autobiogra­phy, “Painting Below Zero: Notes on a Life in Art,” written with David Dalton.

Rosenquist’s work has been featured in exhibition­s at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art and other institutio­ns.

 ?? Manoocher Deghati AFP/Getty Images ?? PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES James Rosenquist made his mark with “Joan Crawford Says,” above, and “President Elect,” which combined images of John F. Kennedy, a Chevrolet and cake.
Manoocher Deghati AFP/Getty Images PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES James Rosenquist made his mark with “Joan Crawford Says,” above, and “President Elect,” which combined images of John F. Kennedy, a Chevrolet and cake.

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