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Artworks
Roy Lichtenstein
Haystack IV (C. 68), 1969Lithograph and screen print20 3/4 x 30 3/4 in
52.5 x 78.1 cmEdition of 100 plus 10 APSeries: HaystackCopyright The ArtistRoy Lichtenstein’s Haystack IV stands as one of the most striking entries in his celebrated Haystack series, where he reimagined Monet’s iconic motif through the lens of Pop Art. Rather...Roy Lichtenstein’s Haystack IV stands as one of the most striking entries in his celebrated Haystack series, where he reimagined Monet’s iconic motif through the lens of Pop Art. Rather than capturing the delicate atmosphere of shifting light as Monet had done, Lichtenstein translates the subject into an image composed entirely of Ben-Day dots and hard-edged color fields.
Here, red and blue dots dominate the composition, with the haystacks themselves only faintly discernible beneath the mechanical patterning. The pastoral subject, once central to Impressionism’s concern with fleeting perception, becomes a coded abstraction, almost dissolving into pure surface and optical vibration. The alternating dots suggest not nature’s variability, but the regularity of industrial reproduction, echoing the processes of mass media and commercial printing.
What Lichtenstein achieves in this work is a deliberate inversion of Monet’s project. Whereas Monet’s haystacks were an exploration of subjective experience, light, and temporality, Lichtenstein presents us with an image that resists intimacy and denies atmospheric depth. Instead, it is a commentary on seeing itself in the age of mechanical reproduction: how images are constructed, how they lose their “aura,” and how perception is conditioned by graphic systems.
The use of bold primary colors (red and blue) further enhances the artificiality of the image, underscoring Lichtenstein’s fascination with the collision of high art and popular culture. By filtering an Impressionist masterwork through his Pop idiom, he not only pays homage to art history but also interrogates it, asking viewers to reconsider what it means to reproduce and reinterpret a canonical subject.
In Haystack IV, the familiar subject is still present, but it hovers on the edge of recognition, forcing the viewer to search through the fields of dots for coherence. This tension between visibility and obscurity is central to Lichtenstein’s reinterpretation of Monet—where the act of looking becomes the subject itself.
For more information or to buy Haystack IV (C. 68) by Roy Lichtenstein, contact our galleries using the form below.%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22artist%22%3ERoy%20Lichtenstein%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22title_and_year%22%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_title%22%3EHaystack%20IV%20%28C.%2068%29%3C/span%3E%2C%20%3Cspan%20class%3D%22title_and_year_year%22%3E1969%3C/span%3E%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22medium%22%3ELithograph%20and%20screen%20print%20%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22dimensions%22%3E20%203/4%20x%2030%203/4%20in%3Cbr/%3E%0A52.5%20x%2078.1%20cm%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22edition_details%22%3EEdition%20of%20100%20plus%2010%20AP%3C/div%3E%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22series%22%3E%3Cspan%20class%3D%22artwork_caption_prefix%22%3ESeries%3A%3C/span%3E%20Haystack%3C/div%3ERelated artworks-
Roy LichtensteinHaystack VII (C. 74), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack VI State III (C. 73), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack VI State II (C. 72), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack VI State I (C. 71), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack VI (C. 70), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack V (C. 69), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack I (C. 65), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack (C. 84), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack III (C. 67), 1969
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Roy LichtensteinHaystack II (C. 66), 1969
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