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  1. "L'autocitation chez Roy Lichtenstein: de Artist's Studio, Look Mickey à la série des Reflections." In L'art dans l'art: littérature, musique et arts visuels: monde anglophone, edited by Bernard Brugière, Marie-Christine Lemardeley, and André Topia. Paris: Presses de la Sorbonne nouvelle, 2000, pp. 347–353 not ill.

  2. 14 de ene. de 2021 · From a Cartoon to a Pop Art Classic. Roy Lichtenstein’s 1961 painting Look Mickey makes a bold and immediate impression. It appears deceptively simple, but the process of moving from its inspiration—a small printed illustration originally published in a children’s book—to a large canvas involved many decisions on the part of the artist.

  3. 24 de ago. de 2015 · Look Mickey! The experimental painting that signalled a new trajectory for Roy Lichtenstein's work. 24 August 2015. 2 minutes.

  4. 12 de mar. de 2021 · Son histoire. Lichtenstein commence sa série Brushstrokes in 1965. Avec cette série, il souhaitait faire un clin d’œil satirique au mouvement expressionniste abstrait, dont il s’était écarté avec la création de Look Mickey en 1961. Il déclarait : « Les coups de pinceau dans une œuvre transmettent un sentiment de grand geste, mais ...

  5. Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Roy Lichtenstein 1970–1980, May 8–June 28, 1981 (Cowart 1981b, no. 62 pp. 74–75 color ill.[double spread]). Traveled to: Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, Wash., July 16–September 6, 1981; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, N.Y., September 22–November 29, 1981; Fort Worth Art Museum, Fort Worth, Tex., December 16 ...

  6. Roy Lichtenstein, el chico tímido del Pop Art. 20minutos 04 de enero de 2012. ... Look Mickey (1961) fue la primera pintura en la que se alejó por completo del expresionismo abstracto.

  7. This exhibition begins in the ’60s with early works by Lichtenstein including the Pop Art icon of that era: Look Mickey. Likewise on exhibit will be the artist’s iconic black-and-white paintings of objects taken from product advertisements as well as landscapes in enamel technique and paintings that paraphrase works by artists such as Picasso, Dalí, Kirchner, and Pollock.