R.B. Kitaj (born Oct. 29, 1932, Chagrin Falls, near Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.—died Oct. 21, 2007, Los Angeles, Calif.) was an American-born painter noted for his eclectic and original contributions to Pop art.
Kitaj studied art at the Cooper Union in New York City and at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. After working as a merchant seaman and serving in the U.S. Army (1955–57), he settled in England and studied at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Arts and at the Royal College of Art in London. Kitaj was associated with the beginnings of the Pop art movement in Great Britain in the early 1960s. His works mingled the impersonal finish characteristic of Pop canvases with the loose, painterly brushwork of Abstract Expressionism but differed from the work of his Pop contemporaries in their complex and allusive figurative imagery. Kitaj’s semiabstract paintings feature brightly coloured and imaginatively interpreted human figures portrayed in puzzling and ambiguous relation to one another. His work was highly intellectual in its wealth of pictorial references to historical, artistic, and literary topics. Kitaj continued to exhibit widely throughout the 1960s and ’70s while teaching painting at various British fine arts schools.
A retrospective of Kitaj’s work—complete with his explanatory notes on the various paintings—at the Tate Gallery (now Tate Britain) in 1994 drew harsh criticism, though it was praised when exhibited in New York and Los Angeles. Kitaj’s wife died shortly after the Tate retrospective, and in 1997 he moved to the United States, where he continued to work.