Dita

by Mel Ramos

Material

Polished aluminium cast with black pedestal; 210 x 100 x 80 cm

Datierung

2011

About the artwork

edition of 8

About the artist

Like many other Pop Art artists, Ramos had intended to become a graphic designer in advertising before he decided to study art. Between 1954 and 1958 he studied at the Sacramento City College, the San José State College and the Sacramento State College. From 1958 he taught at various institutions including the Sacramento State College, the Arizona State University and the California State University.

A student of Wayne Thiebaud, Mel Ramos was a follower of the ‘Bay Figurative School’, a movement, which distanced itself from abstract Expressionism – the predominant genre in the United States during the 1950s. From 1961 onwards, Ramos started to use the imagery of American comics as a source of inspiration. But besides the comic book characters, naked female bodies dominate his oeuvre. His creations satisfy male fantasies, but at the same time his flawless sexual objects appear artificial and absurd. He created images with lascivious pin-up girls placed on commodities in order to mimic the advertising industry’s methods to capitalize on the ‘sex sells’-slogan. Mel Ramos belongs to the original group of American Pop Art artists together with Warhol, Lichtenstein and Rauschenberg, but his explicit display of eroticism adds a whole new facet to Pop Art.