Pop Art is an art of a popular culture. It is a movement of visual art which has been characterized as a sense of optimism in the post war boom of consumers of the 1950's and 1960's. It also coincides with the globalization of youth culture and pop music. It is personified with Beatles and Elvis. It was brash fun, young and hostile to establishment of the art. It includes various styles of sculpture and paintings which is from all the countries, but the thing which is common in all was the interest they have in mass media, mass culture and mass production. For contemplation, Pop Art isolates object by removing material from its context. There have been many themes and techniques that appear from the known mass culture which includes comic books, advertising and various other items that reflect culture (Galenson, 2009).
Influences of Dada Movement to Pop Art
Dada movement is the base work for sound poetry and abstract art, which is the initial point for the performance of art, that prelude for the postmodernism and which reflects an influence over the pop art. It is the celebration of the anti art which by the time has embraced for the use of anarchic political in 1960s and there the movement laid a concrete base for Surrealism (Scherman, 2001).
There lie no rules and system in Dada as it is an art which is created accidently. However, both the Pop Art and Dada are developed in sections for countering the status quo, and standing as an opponent with the “high art” of that time (Osterwold, 1999). A reaction is then rose up for bourgeois pre World War I society by Dadaists. It was that society whose rottenness has been demonstrated ...