A pioneer of British Pop art, Richard Hamilton (1922–2011) was an English painter and collage artist, who explored the consumerism, advertising and the media in the realm of fine art. His 1955 exhibition Man, Machine and Motion at the Hatton Gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne and his 1956 collage Just what is it that makes today’s homes so different, so appealing? Are widely considered as one of the earliest works within the Pop movement.
Richard Hamilton was born in London, in 1922. After briefly working in the advertising department of a commercial studio, Hamilton attended the Royal Academy Schools in 1938. Following his graduation in 1940, the artist then studied engineering draftsmanship at a government training centre and worked as a tool and jig designer during World War II. After the war, he studied etching at the Slade School of Art and taught design between 1952 and 1966.
In the 1950s, Hamilton became a member of the Independent Group, formed within the Institute of Contemporary Arts by artists such as Eduardo Paolozzi and John McHale, critics including Lawrence Alloway and Reyner Banham, and architects like Alison and Peter Smithson. The group succeeded in applying a critical framework to advertising, product design, Hollywood film and popular music. At this point by ‘Pop art’ the Independent Group meant popular culture. Members of the group also believed that fine art should be placed along a continuum, on the same level as popular culture, demolishing traditional, cultural hierarchies. The group shared a common interest in the possibilities of collage, using imagery taken largely from glossy, colour American advertising.
Richard Hamilton’s work is a playful yet critical exploration of consumerism, mass media, and the intersection of high and low culture. Hamilton was experimenting with imagery which he thought encapsulated life. Hamilton’s aesthetic study constituted a close reading of the visual world using the apparatus of iconography. The artist experimented with the deconstruction of the realm of advertising and the visual allure of consumer goods, in an approach inspired by Marcel Duchamp and Surrealism. He succeeded in taking apart and reassembling his chosen imagery to produce a complex and multi-layered work, which teases apart the sophisticated language of advertising.
Richard Hamilton died in 2011 at the age of 89. Today, his works can be found in the collections of the Kunstmuseum Basel, the Tate and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Guggenheim Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, among others.
RICHARD HAMILTON, C.H. (1922-2011)
Microcosmos (Plant Cycle)
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Fashion-Plate (Cosmetic-Study VII)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Study for $he
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Towards a Definitive Statement on the Coming Trends in Men's Wear and Accessories (a) Sketch II
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Pin-up Sketch V
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Microcosmos
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Epiphany
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Putting on de Stijl
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Microcosmos 3
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Somersault
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
A page from the diary of a fly
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
Patricia Knight (Lullin 55)
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
Reaper (h)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Adonis in Y fronts
DIETER ROTH (1930-1998) & RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
Interfaces 15 and 16
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Untitled (panel from Man, Machine and Motion)
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
Swingeing London III (Lullin 84)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Untitled ( P anel from Man, Machine and Motion)
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
re Nude etching
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
People
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Untitled (Panel from Man, Machine and Motion)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Untitled (Panel from Man, Machine and Motion)
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Adonis in Y fronts (Lullin 52)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Picasso's Meninas
Richard Hamilton (B. 1922)
Richard Hamilton (B. 1922)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Release (Cristea 81)
Richard Hamilton
Fashion-plate (L. 76)
RICHARD HAMILTON (B. 1922)
Toaster (Lullin 63)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Conversation
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Toaster
Richard Hamilton
I'm dreaming of a black Christmas (L. 82)
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Toaster (Lullin 63)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Toaster (Lullin 63)
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011) AND MARCEL DUCHAMP (1887-1968)
Sieves (with Marcel Duchamp)
RICHARD HAMILTON (B. 1922)
I'm dreaming of a black Christmas (Lullin 82)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
People (L. 66)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Study for 're Nude'
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Toaster (Lullin 63)
Richard Hamilton (b. 1922)
Esquisse
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
James Joyces's Ulysses
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
Release (L. 83)
Richard Hamilton (1922-2011)
A mirrorical return (L. 185)
RICHARD HAMILTON
Molly (L. 166)
Richard Hamilton (B. 1922)
I'm dreaming of a black Christmas (Lullin 82)
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
I'm Dreaming of a White Christmas
RICHARD HAMILTON (1922-2011)
I'm dreaming of a black Christmas
RICHARD HAMILTON (B. 1922)
Guggenheim (black) (Lulin M3)
RICHARD HAMILTON
Three Studies of Bloom; and By the Waters of Miers (L. 37.1-3; L. 88)