20 Great Depictions of the word “Love” in Art. Literally.

The word love in art

We’ve already shared with you The Evolution of the Kiss in Art through 24 works for a past Valentine’s Day. Now we bring you a more literal interpretation of romance – the various ways 20 different artists have portrayed the word “Love” through paintings, drawings, lithography, sculpture and mixed media since the first and best known by Robert Indiana in 1966.

The Word Love In Art

The first and inarguably best known depiction of the four letters that make up the word ‘love’ is that by pop artist Robert Indiana. The two-row rendering of the word, with its tilted “O,” has become one of the most recognizable works of modern art in the world. What began as a commission for a Christmas Card from the Museum of Modern Art in 1965 turned into the 6′ x 6′ painting on canvas (shown below)  that spawned tons of variations including everything from postage stamps to giant public sculptures.

Robert Indiana, Love, 1966, oil on canvas
Robert Indiana, Love, 1966, oil on canvas

The word LOVE got to be the way it is because I have a kind of a passion about symmetry and the dividing of things into equal parts. The word LOVE is that way because those four letters best fit a square if the square is squared by that particular arrangement. And it was really that sort of a necessity for a very compact form that I came upon that arrangement…With the red, blue and green paintings the interaction in the eye is of such a nature that with the slightest change of light the fields automatically interchange, the positive becomes negative and vice versa, with almost a violent effect in the eye.Robert Indiana

After Indiana’s iconic depiction, the word “love” has since appeared as art in various mediums ranging from graphite to neon by artists all over the world. Here are twenty examples, shown in chronological order from first to last, for you. Click on the artist’s name for more information.

Ed Ruscha, L’AMOUR [#2], 1967
Ed Ruscha, L’AMOUR [#2], 1967
Peter Max, Love, 1967
Peter Max, Love, 1967
Alexander Girard, Love, 1971
Alexander Girard, Love, 1971
Raymond Pettibon, Untitled (With all the), 1987
Raymond Pettibon, Untitled (With all the), 1987
Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled Notebook Page, c.1987
Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled Notebook Page, c.1987
Jenny Holzer, Expiring For Love Is Beautiful But Stupid, 1994
Jenny Holzer, Expiring For Love Is Beautiful But Stupid, 1994
Curtis Kulig, Love Me (Neon), 1998
Curtis Kulig, Love Me (Neon), 1998
Barbara Kruger, Untitled (Love), 2001
Barbara Kruger, Untitled (Love), 2001
Martin Creed, Work No. 374, LOVE, 2004
Martin Creed, Work No. 374, LOVE, 2004
Glenn Ligon, Untitled (If I can't have love, I'll take sunshine), 2006
Glenn Ligon, Untitled (If I can’t have love, I’ll take sunshine), 2006
Banksy, I Love You, 2010 (Ventnor, Isle of Wight and has since been painted over)
Banksy, I Love You, 2010 (Ventnor, Isle of Wight and has since been painted over)
Ben Eine, Sweet Circus Love, 2012
Ben Eine, Sweet Circus Love, 2012
Chris Bracey, Love, 2012
Chris Bracey, Love, 2012
David Shrigley, Love is Stupid, 2012
David Shrigley, Love is Stupid, 2012
Obey Gaint, Love Is The Drug, 2012
Obey Giant (Shepard Fairey), Love is The Drug, 2012
Zeus Coleman, LOVE, mixed media 2013
Dean “Zeus” Coleman, LOVE sculpture, 2013
Tracey Emin, Love is what you want, 2015
Tracey Emin, Love is what you want, 2015
Yayoi Kusama Love Forever
Yayoi Kusama, Love Forever, 2017
Miles Jaffee sculpture Meanie Blue
Miles Jaffee, Meanie Blue (detail), 2018

Happy Valentine’s Day!