Pop Art Tattoos

Gallery of pop art style tattoos that can be filtered by subject, body part and size.

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Tattoo artists

Lillian "Honeybadger" Chendone
room Hillsborough
21
Tattoos
0
likes
2
followers
Line Art
Line Art
+60

Contact

Benny Tattooerdone
room Barcelona 🇪🇸
4
Tattoos
6
likes
3
followers
Neo Japanese
Japanese · Irezumi
+13

Contact

Alev Sarıdone
room Istanbul 🇹🇷
4
Tattoos
4
likes
6
followers
Minimalist
Contemporary
+4

Contact

David Côtédone
room Montreal
507
Tattoos
682
likes
179
followers
Surrealism
Abstract
+2

Contact

Rafael Makarov · Dzikson Wildstyledone
room Kraków
173
Tattoos
73
likes
47
followers
Realism
Contemporary
+1

Contact

Shannon Perrydone
room Seattle
271
Tattoos
81
likes
35
followers
Single Needle
Realism
+2

Contact

Slipydone
room Chalandri
88
Tattoos
24
likes
13
followers
Contemporary
Pop Art
+1

Contact

Aleksy Marcinówdone
room London 🇬🇧 · On the road
175
Tattoos
137
likes
51
followers
Surrealism
Contemporary
+1

Contact

Mattia Mambodone
room Meda 🇮🇹
573
Tattoos
262
likes
101
followers
Traditional
Contemporary
+1

Contact

Polyc SJdone
room Seoul
174
Tattoos
27
likes
13
followers
Contemporary
Contemporary
+2

Contact

Luke Cormierdone
room Sydney
154
Tattoos
15
likes
6
followers
Contemporary
Pop Art
+3

Contact

Andrew Marsh · Little Andydone
room Redditch
185
Tattoos
168
likes
50
followers
Surrealism
Abstract
+2

Contact

Geary Morrilldone
room Richmond 🇺🇸 · Ferndale
80
Tattoos
36
likes
26
followers
Neotraditional
Surrealism
+2

Contact

Jokekpc
room Valencia
Contemporary
Pop Art
+1

Contact

Mat Rule
room Paris 🇫🇷
Contemporary
Pop Art
+1

Contact

Choloststar
room San Francisco
Contemporary
Pop Art
+1

Contact

Brodie Pedersen · Leisure Bandit
room Perth
Contemporary
Pop Art

Contact

Ry Tang
room Tucson
Contemporary
Contemporary
+1

Contact

description

“The Pop artists did images that anybody walking down Broadway could recognize in a split second—comics, picnic tables, men’s trousers, celebrities, shower curtains, refrigerators, coke bottles—all the great modern things that the Abstract Expressionists tried so hard not to notice at all.” – Andy Warhol

Pop Art can take many aesthetic forms, characterized primarily by the subject matter. Pop artists criticize or parody pop culture, consumerism, and mass media.

Following the Abstract and Expressionist movements, Pop Art marked a contemporary return to more identifiable subject matter. In fact, by mocking celebrities and pop culture, it is arguably the most identifiable subject matter since religious iconography.

The birth of Pop Art is commonly credited to New York artists of the 1960s, such as Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Claes Oldenburg. It is still alive today, all over the world, commonly found in digital media, tattooing and street art. Banksy is credited with being one of the most recognizable pop artists of the 21st century.

The intention of Pop Artists is what makes them Pop Artists, along with their use of existing imagery in pop culture. Their work is a critical reaction to mass consumption of products and people for commercial reasons. They aim to mock the entire value system that emerged in the west following WWII.

Ironically, Pop Art often becomes very commercially valuable because the subject matter is still widely consumed. This paradoxically launches a counter-culture into the mainstream, sometimes making the artists themselves very famous in the exact environment they set out to dismantle.

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