Mood Interiors is a specialist interior design company that provides exciting, creative interiors for both the residential and commercial clients in South Yorkshire, North, East West Yorkshire and Derbyshire. Established in 2004 by Paula Rist, Mood offers a professional and comprehensive service that works with the individual needs of every client.

Tuesday 1 April 2014

Ka-Pow Its Pop Art



Pop art is an art movement that emerged in Britain and the United States in the mid-1950’s.  This unique and striking style was first seen in commercial industries before making its move into the residential sector.

Pop art abbreviation for “popular art”, was a response to the cerebral and abstract movements that had come before it like abstract expressionism.  Presenting a challenge to traditions of fine art, ‘Pop Art’ included imagery from popular culture such as advertisements and the news.

Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein are just two of many ‘Pop art’ designers whose prints are commonly used within the Interior design industry.  Materials are visually removed from its known context, isolated, and combined with unrelated images. This is seen in Andy Warhol’s ‘Campbell’s Soup’, the iconic portrait of Marilyn Monroe and Lichtenstein’s painting; ‘Interior with water lilies’. The concept of pop art refers not as much to the art itself, but to the attitudes that led to it. 

Artwork is and always will be an essential component to any stylish interior, and Pop Art is usually seen in modern contemporary homes and interiors as a feature or main focal point to a room.  Because of its bright and clashing colour pallet and bold imagery, one piece of artwork is usually all you need to spruce up a room and create an electric aesthetic centre piece, although some will go to the extreme and design the entire room as if you were walking into a comic book.  Pop art will always bring energy and excitement into a space whatever or however you decide to do it.

You can still see homes today sporting this popular fashion trend through paintings, prints and futuristic furniture.  Out of all the defining style movements, surely none is more fun than the ‘Pop’ movement.