Lowbrow or lowbrow art is probably the most widely used name describing an underground visual art movement that arose in the Los Angeles, California, area in the late 1970s. Lowbrow is a widespread populist art movement with origins in the underground comix world, punk music, hot-rod street culture and other California subcultures.
The majority of lowbrow artworks are paintings, with some sculptures.
Mark Ryden, Todd Schorr, Tim Biskup, Gary Baseman, Anthony Ausgang, and Camille Rose Garcia are some of the more well-known artists currently working in this style. Lowbrow continues to grow in popularity - the movement has more web sites, galleries and fans devoted to it than ever before.
However, a number of artists who started their careers by showing in lowbrow galleries have gone on to show their work primarily in mainstream "fine" art galleries. Robert Williams, Manuel Ocampo, Georganne Deen, and the Clayton Brothers are examples. Indeed, in the past 85 years, beginning with the work of the Dadaists and the leading proponents of the American Regionalism movement, artists like Marcel Duchamp and Thomas Hart Benton have questioned the distinctions between high and low art, fine art and folk art, and popular culture and high-art culture. In some sense lowbrow art is about exploring and critiquing those distinctions, and it thus shares similarities with pop art. For some, the label "lowbrow" is misunderstood to mean that the work itself is lowbrow, when in fact this term has always been used ironically to comment on the ongoing struggle by many lowbrow artists to 'subvert' elitist highbrow art assumptions and values.
Just as the lowbrow artists play in the blurred boundaries between high and low culture, many artists like Lisa Yuskavage, Barry McGee, Kelly D. Williams, Kenny Scharf, Takashi Murakami, Jim Shaw, John Currin, and Mike Kelley use artistic strategies similar to those employed by lowbrow artists.
In his book Creating A new Civilization, Alvin Toffler (1994) titled a subchapter (page 56) “lowbrows versus highbrows”. He believes that lowbrow is product focused, while highbrow is focused on information. In the case of lowbrow art there is a contradiction. The artwork itself often carries a message that criticizes industrial society and therefore the work would rather be highbrow than lowbrow. The materialization of these ideas often comes in items like prints on clothing, comic books and vinyl action figures that are collectors items. The focus on material possession is typically lowbrow.
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There are also books about lowbrow art that are collections of the work of individual artists; such as Mark Ryden, Robert Williams, Joe Coleman, The Pizz, SHAG (Josh Agle), and Liz McGrath.
A significant lowbrow publication is Robert Williams' Juxtapoz magazine, which functions as a sort of journal of the movement.
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