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The Globalisation Of Pop Culture And The Globalization Of Popular Culture

Satisfactory Essays

With the globalisation of popular culture dominating the 21st century across a multitude of media platforms, it has grown exponentially alongside politics as an elemental factor that sparks artists’ works. Popular culture can influence society’s attitudes towards a specific topic much like art is political that it engages with society with visual pieces that can influence people’s thoughts and provoke a deeper understanding of a subject. It can be recognised that “contemporary politics is itself conducted through the language and the formats of popular culture,” particularly with the rise of social media and media outlets (Street, 1997, p. 6).

Tony Futura is a digital artist based in Berlin who whimsically intertwines the influences of …show more content…

With that being said, it is interesting that these two colours who have contradicting meanings and are equally not complementary colours, may have been used to symbolize the animosity between the United States and North Korea.

The media has proven to be a “huge impact on society in shaping the public opinion of the masses. They can form or modify the public opinion in different ways depending of what is the objective” (Mughal, 2013). It allows for everlasting connectivity to the world at large, to which, politicians are engaged with, as the country one governs is directly impacted by their decisions.

Highly known for being a prominent figure in leading the movement of Pop art, Andy Warhol was an American artist who created paintings revolving around commercial goods, celebrity culture, and mainstream perceptions. In particular, following the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Warhol along with the entire nation were enraptured by the mass media coverage. Subsequently, Warhol found himself overwhelmed by Kennedy’s widow Jacqueline Bouvier, specifically in the change of her demeanour, which led to the creation of large a series of portraits. His most notable piece from the series is called “Nine Jackies” (1964), which has closely-cropped images showcasing her various facial expressions in white, black, and blue. Warhol had taken the

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