While Pop Art is regarded as a celebration of Western consumer culture, this show sets out to tell its global story. Featuring artists from the Middle East and Latin America, it reveals how the movement was used as a language of protest in many mediums.
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
Doll Festival (1966), Ushio Shinohara © Ushio and Noriko Shinohara

Valentine (1966), Evelyne Axell. Photo: Paul Louis © Evelyne Axell/DACS 2015

Cubes (1968), Teresa Burga. Photo: Courtesy the artist and Galerie Barbara Thumm © Teresa Burga
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Bombs in Love (1962), Kiki Kogelnik

Atomic Kiss (1968), Joan Rabascall. Photo: Tony Coll © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2015
Event website
What would Jane Austen say?