30. A New Brand of Brilliance (from 'Bunk')

© trustees of the Paolozzi Foundation, licensed by DACS 2024. Image credit: Royal Air Force Museum

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While in the late-1940s austerity measures persisted in Britain, American commodities and advertising, by contrast, reflected the USA’s economic and cultural dominance. They also reflected America’s popular imagination inspired by the emerging jet and space age. Eduardo Paolozzi explored this when, to compile his Surrealist-inspired collages, he acquired magazines from ex-US servicemen in Paris as well as from shops in the East End of London. He made these collages between 1947 and 1952. In 1952 he showed them in a slideshow for fellow members of the Independent Group, an inter-disciplinary group of artists, architects, writers and critics who later, as rationing ended, defined everyday visual culture as ‘Pop’ – ‘expendable’, ‘mass-produced’, 'young', and ‘sexy’.

Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon

London

Title

30. A New Brand of Brilliance (from 'Bunk')

Date

1972

Medium

lithograph

Accession number

FA05399

Work type

Print

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Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon

Grahame Park Way, London, Greater London NW9 5LL England

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