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In the 1980s, Keith Haring's cartoon-like images were everywhere — from t-shirts and New York City streets to art galleries around the world. His figures of dancers, hearts, babies and dogs ...
Haring is, for a short time, a faux hippie; experiments with drugs, hitchhikes across America selling Grateful Dead and anti-Nixon t-shirts that he makes. May 4, 1958 PHOTO: Family portrait of the ...
Keith Haring made being a nerd cool. The guy from Kutztown, Pa., dressed like an 11-year-old, in T-shirts and chunky sneakers. He loved sci-fi and cartoons. Skinny, prematurely balding, fond of hug… ...
The wide-open generosity of spirit in Keith Haring’s vivacious work is seen in the Broad's deft show, which culls together about 120 works that he created between 1982 and 1989.
The shop carried posters, t-shirts and other objects printed with Haring’s designs. A reaction to the elitism of the art market, ... Keith Haring’s Pisa mural, June 1989.
Keith Haring’s colorful, animated imagery may be commercially ubiquitous — found on T-shirts, mugs, rugs, even a signature Barbie Doll donning a Haring print on pink pants — but the late Pop ...
“Keith Haring: The Political Line ... On the commercial side, Haring opened his Pop Shop retail space in New York in 1986, where he sold “$20 T-shirts, accessible things,” Gruen says.
In the 1980s, Keith Haring's cartoon-like images were everywhere — from t-shirts and New York City streets to art galleries around the world. His figures of dancers, hearts, babies and dogs ...
Keith Haring’s work falls into that category. The ubiquity of the graffiti artist’s colorful, cartoonish, kinetic figures — which continue to adorn T-shirts, ...
T-shirts printed with Haring’s art in the window of a Gap Kids store in Manhattan, 2015 ROBERT ALEXANDER/GETTY IMAGES Haring’s legacy remains as much about branding and economics as art.
If you were alive in the 1980s, you've probably seen the art of Keith Haring. His graffiti-inspired images were everywhere: canvases and T-shirts, walls and subway stations.