Roy Lichtenstein, Haystack #7, 1969 |
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| Artist: | Roy Lichtenstein (1923 - 1997) |
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| Title: | Haystack #7, 1969 |
| Series: | Haystack Series, 1969 |
| Medium: | Relief print on special Arjomari paper |
| Image Size: | 13 5/8 x 23 5/8 in. (34.6 x 60 cm) |
| Sheet Size: | 20 3/4 x 30 5/8 in. (52.7 x 77.8 cm) |
| Edition: | This work is numbered from the edition of 13 plus 1 RTP and published by Original Editions, New York. |
| Signature: | This work is hand-signed by Roy Lichtenstein (New York, 1923 – New York, 1997) in pencil ‘rf Lichtenstein’. |
| ID # | w-8983 |
Roy Lichtenstein, Haystack #7, 1969, completes his series with a striking synthesis of Pop Art’s bold graphic style and the enduring motif of Monet’s haystacks. The image is defined by sharp lines, vibrant color contrasts, and the characteristic use of Ben-Day dots, transforming the pastoral subject into a stylized, almost emblematic form. The composition balances flatness and depth, inviting viewers to reconsider the interplay between natural landscapes and mechanical reproduction.
This work embodies Lichtenstein’s elegant tension between homage and reinvention, where tradition is both celebrated and deconstructed. Haystack #7 stands as a unique testament to his ability to bridge art history and modern visual culture with clarity, wit, and conceptual rigor.
Created in 1969, this Lichtenstein pop art screenprint in colors is hand-signed by Roy Lichtenstein (New York, 1923 – New York, 1997) in pencil: ‘rf Lichtenstein’. Numbered from the edition of 100, this work is published by Original Editions, New York.
Roy Lichtenstein’s Haystack Series (1969) is a bold and conceptual reinterpretation of Claude Monet’s iconic Haystacks, reframed through the visual vocabulary of Pop Art. Rather than capturing the fleeting effects of light and atmosphere with painterly brushstrokes, Lichtenstein translates Monet’s impressionistic softness into a language of hard edges, Ben-Day dots, and synthetic color. Each print in the series reimagines the same rural motif with graphic precision, systematically altering color combinations and patterns to evoke different times of day or seasons—mimicking Monet’s original intent but subverting its method.
By reducing organic forms to industrialized surfaces, Lichtenstein challenges the romanticism of nature and the emotional expressiveness of Impressionism. The Haystack Series becomes a meditation on reproduction, perception, and the history of art itself—transforming a deeply personal and atmospheric subject into a commentary on modern image-making. Elegant in its restraint and conceptually rich, the series exemplifies Lichtenstein’s ability to bridge past and present through irony, intellect, and unmistakable style.
The works in Roy Lichtenstein’s Haystack Series (1969) include: Haystack #1, Haystack #2, Haystack #3, Haystack #4, Haystack #5, Haystack #6, Haystack #6 State I, Haystack #6 State II, Haystack #6 State III, Haystack #7.
Catalogue Raisonné & COA:
Roy Lichtenstein Haystack #7, 1969 is fully documented and referenced in the below catalogue raisonnés and texts (copies will be enclosed as added documentation with the invoices that will accompany the final sale of the work).
About the Framing:
Roy Lichtenstein Haystack #7, 1969 is framed to museum-grade, conservation standards, presented in a complementary moulding and finished with silk-wrapped mats and optical grade Plexiglas.
Subject Matter: $16-50k Contemporary Landscape Abstract