Here's the whole idea in one breath: after the war, ordinary life filled up with shiny mass-produced stuff — ads, telly, supermarkets, packaging — and a few cheeky artists asked, "well, why isn't that a subject for art?" Then they hauled a soup can and a comic strip straight into the gallery, and art was never quite so snooty again.
Start with the World They Woke Up In
Picture Britain and America in the 1950s and early '60s. The grim rationing years are over, factories that built tanks are now pumping out fridges and cars, and the shops are suddenly bursting. Advertising is everywhere — on the new television in the lounge room, on billboards, on the side of every bus. Tinned food, branded soap, glossy magazines: this is the consumer boom, the first time most people could just buy things, loads of them, all the time.
For centuries "proper" art meant gods, kings, battles and bowls of fruit — never a packet of washing powder. But these young artists had grown up inside the adverts. To them the supermarket wasn't beneath art; it was the realest, loudest thing around. So they pointed at it. That decision — to treat everyday mass-made objects as worthy of a frame — is the seed of Pop Art, and it's pure cultural thinking: not how a thing is built, but what it says about the world that made it.
The Two Scenes That Kicked It Off
Over in Britain in 1956, Richard Hamilton made a small collage with a very long title — Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing? — crammed with a muscly bloke, a glamorous woman, a tinned ham, a vacuum cleaner and a giant lollipop with the word POP on it. It was a cut-out portrait of the whole new consumer world, and many people point to it as the spark.
Meanwhile the American pop scene was gearing up to go even bigger and bolder — Warhol's soup cans, Lichtenstein's comic panels — turning the supermarket and the newsstand into the gallery's new favourite subjects. We'll meet those artists properly on the last rung. For now, the point is simply: the everyday became the art.
In the toy, drop a frame around an ordinary tin and watch what happens. The object never changes — same paint, same label — but the moment it's on a gallery wall instead of a shelf, your eye stops and gives it a proper look. That little flip, from "thing to buy" to "thing to look at", is exactly what these artists discovered they could do.