The White Album: How Richard Hamilton Brought Conceptual Art to the Beatles, Contemporary Art

$ 30.00

4.6
(596)
In stock
Description

Fifty years ago, in 1968, the Beatles faced the task of following up on Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, the album that Kenneth Tynan, the theatre critic at The Times in London, had described as “a decisive moment in the history of Western civilisation”. The sprawling 30-track double album that emerged was simply titled The Beatles. But no one ever calls it that. The name we do have for it is thanks to Richard Hamilton. The British artist was himself charged with following up on a titanic achievement – Peter Blake and Jann Haworth’s cover for Sgt Pepper. His solution was simple: to leave the cover almost completely blank; a minimal, conceptual response to the explosion of imagery and colour in Blake and Haworth’s design. Hence, in the popular imagination, The Beatles became the “White Album”.

The White Album: How Richard Hamilton Brought Conceptual Art to

PDF) The embarrassment of abundance. Unity and fragmentation on

The Beatles' White Album: Pop Art or Blank Canvas

Here's What Cardiologists Say About The Apple Watch's New Heart Monitoring Features SELF

Richard Hamilton, British Painter and a Creator of Pop Art, Dies

MoMA The LP Cover: A Counter-Cultural Icon

An “exhibition of exhibitions” for father of pop art Richard

Just What Is It That Makes the White Album so Different, so

How Richard Hamilton Made the Beatles's White Album a Pop Art Icon

OBITUARY : Richard Hamilton Dies, Designer of the Beatles' White Album