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Simon Dixon was a Brighton-based artist and print maker, whose fine art pieces centred around icons of the twentieth century. Dixon’s love of pop culture and deep interest in twentieth century history combine in a truly distinctive aesthetic: referencing 1960s Pop Art, his paintings are a big, bold and colourful reworking of the traditional portrait.
‘Johnny Cash MKII’ depicts a pop-ified portrait of the eponymous country singer. Against a flat, turquoise-coloured background, Cash poses with his guitar, looking out towards the viewer with striking intensity. Over the image, Dixon has printed the words, ‘This Machine Kills Fascists’: the message that Woody Guthrie famously pinned to his guitar in 1941. An iconic work of art, Dixon has brilliantly merged cultural references, creating a modern-day print to rival Warhol’s Marilyn.
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Simon Dixon was a Brighton-based artist and print maker, whose fine art pieces centred around icons of the twentieth century. Dixon’s love of pop culture and deep interest in twentieth century history combine in a truly distinctive aesthetic: referencing 1960s Pop Art, his paintings are a big, bold and colourful reworking of the traditional portrait.
‘Johnny Cash MKII’ depicts a pop-ified portrait of the eponymous country singer. Against a flat, turquoise-coloured background, Cash poses with his guitar, looking out towards the viewer with striking intensity. Over the image, Dixon has printed the words, ‘This Machine Kills Fascists’: the message that Woody Guthrie famously pinned to his guitar in 1941. An iconic work of art, Dixon has brilliantly merged cultural references, creating a modern-day print to rival Warhol’s Marilyn.