LARRY RIVERS
Larry Rivers (1923-2002) was an American artist whose work fused the lively mark-making of Abstract Expressionism with the commercial images of advertising. Often viewed as a precursor to Pop Art and artists like Andy Warhol, Rivers' paintings and his ironic attitude towards his own and others' artwork marked a significant break from his peers, and the more serious intentions of the Abstract Expressionist painters that came before him. Born in the Bronx, NY to Jewish Ukrainian immigrants, he changed his name at 17 from Yitzroch Loiza Grossberg to Larry Rivers. He studied with Hans Hofmann in the late 1940s, and chose to apply his skill and draftsmanship to works depicting naturalistic subject matter with loose, flowing brushstrokes. Beginning in the 1970s, Rivers used airbrushing, stenciling, printmaking, and assemblage in his art, and was an integral member of the Chelsea Hotel scene as well as a frequent guest at Warhol's Factory. The artist has a major retrospective at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. in 2002, the same year as his death at the age of 78.