1956 in art
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Events
- March 1 – Replica statue of the Discus Thrower dedicated in Washington, D.C., as a gift from the Italian government to commemorate the return of looted art objects after World War II.[1]
 - March – 56 Group founded, to promote modernist art in Wales. Subsequently renamed 56 Group Wales.
 - September 17 – Release in the United States of the biographical film Lust for Life with Kirk Douglas portraying Vincent van Gogh and Anthony Quinn as Paul Gauguin.
 - Le mystère Picasso, a French documentary film, shows Pablo Picasso in the act of creating paintings for the camera (which he subsequently destroys so that they will exist only on film).
 - William Klein publishes his photo essay New York, 1954–55.
 - Shanghai Art Museum, the predecessor of the China Art Museum, opens.
 - English curator Jim Ede settles at Kettle's Yard, Cambridge, England.
 - English painter Edward Seago joins a tour of the Antarctic.
 
Awards
- Archibald Prize: William Dargie – Mr Albert Namatjira
 - Kate Greenaway Medal – Edward Ardizzone for Tim All Alone
 
Works
- Pietro Annigoni – Portrait of Elizabeth II
 - Laurence Bradshaw – Monument to Karl Marx at Highgate Cemetery, London (including bronze bust)
 - Alexander Calder – Red Mobile
 - Frank Cadogan Cowper – The Golden Bowl
 - Salvador Dalí – Living Still Life
 - M. C. Escher – Print Gallery (lithograph)
 - Max Ernst – L’oiseau Rose
 - Helen Frankenthaler – Eden
 - Richard Hamilton – Just What Is It that Makes Today's Homes So Different, So Appealing? (collage)
 - Rudolf Hausner – The Ark of Odysseus
 - Eduardo Kingman – La Lavendera
 - Roy Lichtenstein – Ten Dollar Bill (lithograph)
 - L. S. Lowry – The Floating Bridge
 - Candido Portinari – Self-portrait
 - Norman Rockwell – The Scoutmaster
 - Alexander Nikolayevich Samokhvalov – Cafe Gurzuf
 - Charles Sheeler – On a Shaker Theme
 - David Wynne – Sir Thomas Beecham (bronzes)
 
Exhibitions
- August 9–September 9 – This Is Tomorrow, Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, featuring principally the interdisciplinary ICA Independent Group, including early examples of Pop Art.[2]
 
Births
- January 19 – Junpei Satoh, Japanese Western-style painter
 - February 24 – Fiona Graham-Mackay, née Bain, British portrait painter
 - May 25 – Andrea Pazienza, Italian comics artist (d. 1988)
 - Emma Biggs, English mosaicist
 - Cornelia Parker, English sculptor and installation artist
 
Deaths
- January 13 – Lyonel Feininger, German American painter and cartoonist (b. 1871)
 - April 23 – Cecile Walton, Scottish painter, illustrator and sculptor (b. 1891)
 - May 3 – Peter Watson, English arts benefactor (murdered) (b. 1908)
 - June 8 – Marie Laurencin, French painter and engraver (b. 1883)
 - July 26 – Louis Raemaekers, Dutch painter and cartoonist (b. 1869)
 - August 7 – LeMoine FitzGerald, Canadian painter (b. 1890)
 - August 11 – Jackson Pollock, American painter (b. 1912)
 - August 16 – Theodor Pallady, Romanian painter (b. 1871)
 - November 3 – Jean Metzinger, French painter (b. 1883)
 - December 16 – Nina Hamnett, British painter, model and designer (b. 1890)
 - Mohamed Nagy, Egyptian painter (b. 1888)
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Discus Thrower (sculpture)". Art Inventories Catalog. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 2012-04-19.
 - ↑ Livingstone, Marco (1990). Pop Art: a Continuing History. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
 
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