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Artworks
Roy Lichtenstein
Shipboard Girl (C. II 6), 1965Offset lithograph on lightweight, white wove paper26 x 19 in
66 x 48.3 cmEdition of unknown sizeSeries: Prints of the 1960sCopyright The ArtistRoy Lichtenstein’s Shipboard Girl (1965) is one of the artist’s quintessential Pop images, crystallizing his fascination with romance, mass media, and the graphic language of comic strips. Published as part...Roy Lichtenstein’s Shipboard Girl (1965) is one of the artist’s quintessential Pop images, crystallizing his fascination with romance, mass media, and the graphic language of comic strips. Published as part of a promotional portfolio for the Bellevue Art Museum, this offset lithograph reflects the artist’s exploration of commercial print aesthetics and the ways in which high art and popular culture collide.
The composition presents a close-up of a blonde woman with her head tilted back, eyes closed, and lips parted in a dreamy expression. Behind her, a simplified nautical scene unfolds: the rail of a ship, a life preserver, and the open horizon. These details anchor the subject within a romanticized narrative, a fleeting moment of emotional intensity. The cropped framing and enlarged scale give the image cinematic immediacy, heightening the melodrama of the scene.
Lichtenstein employs his signature Ben-Day dots, flat planes of saturated color, and bold black outlines, echoing the visual shorthand of mass-printed comic books. The subject recalls his iconic depictions of “girls” from the early 1960s—figures of desire, longing, or heartbreak—rendered with both sincerity and irony. Shipboard Girl is a prime example of how Lichtenstein simultaneously celebrated and critiqued the clichés of postwar consumer culture, especially the commodification of romance.
Unlike his hand-painted canvases, this work was produced as an offset lithograph, a technique associated with posters, advertising, and mass circulation. By creating an edition of 3000, Lichtenstein embraced the notion of art as reproducible, accessible, and inseparable from the mechanisms of consumer society. This democratization of the image is central to the Pop ethos and to Lichtenstein’s practice, which blurred the lines between original and copy, fine art and popular media.
Today, Shipboard Girl is celebrated not only as an emblem of Pop Art but also as a reflection of 1960s American culture: optimistic, mass-produced, and saturated with imagery of idealized beauty and romance. Its enduring appeal lies in the tension between intimacy and artifice, authenticity and reproduction—a tension that defined much of Lichtenstein’s oeuvre.
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