About this artwork
The usually straight, parallel lines of musical staves are liberated here into curving and looping waves. Music was one of Lichtenstein’s great loves – he played the clarinet in his youth, and learnt the saxophone at the age of 70. During the late 1930s, he visited New York’s vibrant jazz clubs and jazz became a lifelong passion. This print responds to the creative and improvisatory nature of this style of music. It also acts as a playful visual pun on the artist’s own fascination with the arrangement of line, form and colour in the composition of artworks. The print, the third in a series of three ‘Composition’ prints, was produced for the Foundation for Art and Preservation in Embassies (FAPE), a non-profit organisation dedicated to enabling American art to be displayed in United States embassies worldwide.
Updated before 2020
see media-
artist:Roy Lichtenstein (1923 - 1997) American
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title:Composition III
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date created:1996
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materials:Screenprint on paper
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measurements:129.40 x 90.20 cm
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object type:
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credit line:ARTIST ROOMS Tate and National Galleries of Scotland. Lent by The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation Collection 2015
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accession number:AL00380
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gallery:

Roy Lichtenstein
Roy Lichtenstein
New York artist Lichtenstein began making paintings inspired by consumer culture as a reaction against the emotional involvement of Abstract Expressionism. He was inspired by comic-strip illustrations, which he enlarged. Although his works may look as if they are made by a machine, Lichtenstein...