An artist of beaded installation tableaus*, still lifes, and portraits, Liza Lou has gained recognition for installations* such has Kitchen and Back Yard and for her beaded portraits of all forty-two... Read full biography
An artist of beaded installation tableaus*, still lifes, and portraits, Liza Lou has gained recognition for installations* such has Kitchen and Back Yard and for her beaded portraits of all forty-two presidents of the United States including George Bush, Jr. Her work, described as "Pop suffused... Read full biography
An artist of beaded installation tableaus*, still lifes, and portraits, Liza Lou has gained recognition for installations* such has Kitchen and Back Yard and for her beaded portraits of all forty-two presidents of the United States including George Bush, Jr. Her work, described as "Pop suffused shrine," began in 1989 as a nod to Andy Warhol. In an interview with Tracy Tynan, December/ January 98-99 MADISON, the artist said that "Pop art* was the first art that made sense to me. If I had my way... Read full biography
An artist of beaded installation tableaus*, still lifes, and portraits, Liza Lou has gained recognition for installations* such has Kitchen and Back Yard and for her beaded portraits of all forty-two presidents of the United States including George Bush, Jr. Her work, described as "Pop suffused shrine," began in 1989 as a nod to Andy Warhol. In an interview with Tracy Tynan, December/ January 98-99 MADISON, the artist said that "Pop art* was the first art that made sense to me. If I had my way I would definitely bead the whole world because everything is so lackluster in everyday life.". Lou is a small-sized woman, now in her late 20s, who lives in a sparsely decorated studio apartment in Topanga Canyon in California. The sparseness of her... Read full biography
An artist of beaded installation tableaus*, still lifes, and portraits, Liza Lou has gained recognition for installations* such has Kitchen and Back Yard and for her beaded portraits of all forty-two presidents of the United States including George Bush, Jr. Her work, described as "Pop suffused shrine," began in 1989 as a nod to Andy Warhol. In an interview with Tracy Tynan, December/ January 98-99 MADISON, the artist said that "Pop art* was the first art that made sense to me. If I had my way I would definitely bead the whole world because everything is so lackluster in everyday life.". Lou is a small-sized woman, now in her late 20s, who lives in a sparsely decorated studio apartment in Topanga Canyon in California. The sparseness of her surroundings is a marked contrast to her beaded work including the beaded headband she wears to hol... Read full biography