Modern Head

Roy Lichtenstein, Modern Head, 1974/1990, painted stainless steel, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Jeffrey H. Loria in loving memory of his sister, Harriet Loria Popowitz

 
, 2008.28A-F, © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein
Roy Lichtenstein, Modern Head, 1974/1990, painted stainless steel, 3722328 in. (944.9589.320.3 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Jeffrey H. Loria in loving memory of his sister, Harriet Loria Popowitz , 2008.28A-F, © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein

Artwork Details

Title
Modern Head
Date
1974/1990
Dimensions
3722328 in. (944.9589.320.3 cm)
Copyright
© Estate of Roy Lichtenstein
Credit Line
Gift of Jeffrey H. Loria in loving memory of his sister, Harriet Loria Popowitz 
Mediums
Mediums Description
painted stainless steel
Classifications
Subjects
  • Figure — head
Object Number
2008.28A-F

Artwork Description

The Smithsonian American Art Museum acquired the monumental sculpture Modern Head by Roy Lichtenstein, a major figure in the pop art movement, in 2008.

Modern Head stands thirty-one feet tall and is made of stainless steel painted blue. The sculpture is part of a series Lichtenstein began in the late 1960s that explored the idea of creating images of human figures that look like machines. This concept pervaded the artist's work throughout his career.

Lichtenstein created the first Modern Head in 1974 out of wood that was painted blue. In 1989 he produced an edition of four in brushed steel. In 1990 the artist painted one a vibrant blue, making the sculpture in American Art's collection a unique work.

Silhouetted against the urban skyline, the flat planes and curvilinear geometric forms of the sculpture blend the streamlined industrial style of 1930s art deco architecture and design with references to Picasso and Apollo, the Greek god of the arts.

In 1996, Modern Head was installed by the Public Art Fund of New York City in Battery Park City, one block from the World Trade Center. The sculpture survived the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks with only surface scratches and was temporarily used by the FBI as a message board during its investigations. The sculpture was removed from the site on November 9, 2001, and was subsequently on view at the Nassau County Museum of Art in Roslyn Harbor, New York, and at the Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden in Coral Gables, Florida.

The sculpture is installed on the grounds of the Museum's main building at the corner of Ninth and F streets, N.W.

Smithsonian American Art Museum, 2008

Works by this artist (13 items)

Roy Lichtenstein, Modern Head, 1974/1990, painted stainless steel, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Jeffrey H. Loria in loving memory of his sister, Harriet Loria Popowitz

 
, 2008.28A-F, © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein
Modern Head
Date1974/1990
painted stainless steel
On view
Save Our Planet Save Our Water
Date1971
screenprint on photo-offset lithograph
Not on view
Roy Lichtenstein, Night Seascape, felt, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Woodward Foundation, 1977.48.43
Night Seascape
Not on view

More Artworks from the Collection

Robert Hudson, Maquette for Tlingit, 1979, welded steel, assembled and painted, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the General Services Administration, 1980.49.18
Maquette for Tlingit
Date1979
welded steel, assembled and painted
Not on view
Rudolph Heintze, Intermediate Installation Design for Locations, 1976, wood, plaster, steel, paperboard and foam rubber, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the General Services Administration, Art-in-Architecture Program, 1979.159.31
Intermediate Installation Design for Locations
Date1976
wood, plaster, steel, paperboard and foam rubber
Not on view
Joseph Goto, Number 10, 1961-1962, welded steel, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the S. W. and B. M. Koffler Foundation, 1979.53.13
Number 10
Date1961-1962
welded steel
Not on view
Ernest Trova, FM/5' AWF #3, 1986, stainless steel, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Philip Samuels Fine Art and museum purchase made possible by Mary W. Cure, 1990.17
FM/5′ AWF #3
Date1986
stainless steel
Not on view