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Roy Lichtenstein’s longtime Hamptons retreat, once a carriage house, hit the market for roughly $20 million in September following the death of his wife, Dorothy. The home remains on the market.
She died in July after spending most of the past ... Updated 10:21 a.m.: The article originally stated that the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation was selling the townhouse. It has since been corrected ...
Roy Lichtenstein’s paintings are some of the ... nearly three decades after his death at the age of 73. Lichtenstein’s wife Dorothy remained at the property in the years since but passed ...
Richard Taverna for Sotheby's International Realty The listing hit the market some two months after the death of Dorothy — the co-founder and president of the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation ...
After returning to New York, she became director of the Bianchini Gallery in Manhattan, where she met her husband, pop artist Roy Lichtenstein. After his death in 1997, she cofounded the Roy ...
a prominent arts patron and widow of the acclaimed Pop artist Roy Lichtenstein, died on July 4 at her home in Southampton, N.Y. She was 84. The cause was heart failure after a brief illness ...
The cause of death was renal failure ... Jasper Johns, Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg and Frank Stella, among others, and more recent years saw frequent ...
Felsen, beloved co-founder of the seminal Los Angeles printmaking workshop Gemini G.E.L., died of renal failure ... Richard Serra, Roy Lichtenstein and others, who produced pieces of modern ...
(Both items are preserved in this latest improvement.) After Roy’s death in 1997, the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation, led by Dorothy, used the building until 2022, when it donated the studio to the ...
It’s Thursday. Today we’ll find out what has happened to the studio in the West Village where the artist Roy Lichtenstein worked from the late 1980s until his death in 1997. We’ll also find ...
Museum Director and CEO Charles Venable said it has been working with the Roy Lichtenstein Foundation in New York for over a year to bring the work to Indianapolis. Lichtenstein died in 1997.