Burton Morris
60″ × 48″
Silkscreen and Acrylic on Canvas
Pop! is an early and defining work by contemporary pop artist Burton Morris, presenting the visual language that helped establish his internationally recognizable style. A tilted popcorn box bursts with animated kernels that scatter across a radiant blue field. Thick black outlines, simplified forms, and saturated color create an image that feels immediate, energetic, and unmistakably graphic.
The work situates Morris within the lineage of Pop Art that emerged in the 1960s through artists such as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein. Like those pioneers, Morris draws from the visual vocabulary of advertising, cinema, and consumer culture. Yet his work replaces Pop Art’s often ironic detachment with celebration. The popcorn box becomes a symbol of entertainment, spectacle, and collective cultural experience.
In Pop!, motion is conveyed through repetition and composition. The exploding kernels animate the surface while the bold geometry of the box anchors the scene. The painting reflects Morris’ early emphasis on crisp iconography and high-contrast color, where images function as instantly recognizable cultural symbols.
This work also introduces one of the artist’s most enduring icons. The popcorn box later becomes central to Morris’ Pop! x Bang! series, where the image evolves into a vessel filled with roses and layered meaning. Seen in this earlier context, Pop! captures the origin of that visual language, where the icon appears in its purest and most graphic form.
Today the painting stands as a quintessential example of contemporary Pop Art painting—bold, celebratory, and visually direct. It marks the moment when Morris transformed an everyday cinematic object into a lasting pop symbol, laying the foundation for the expanded, more expressive iconography seen throughout his later work.