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==Background==
[[File:Our Fighting Forces number 71.jpg|thumb|left|upright|The source of ''Torpedo...Los!'' is "Battle of the Ghost Ships?" (story by [[Bob Haney]], art by [[Jack Abel]]) in DC Comics' ''Our Fighting Forces'' (October 1962).]]
The source of the image is [[Jack Abel]]'s art in the [[Bob Haney]]-written story "Battle of the Ghost Ships?", in [[DC Comics]]' ''Our Fighting Forces'' #71 (October 1962), although the content of the speech balloon is different (this is issue number 72 according to some sources and 71 (a) according to others).<ref name=GCD>[https://www.comics.org/issue/17189/ Our Fighting Forces #71] at the [[Grand Comics Database]]</ref><ref name=RLDW>{{harvnb|Waldman|1993|pages=96–97, 104}}</ref><ref name=TLLF>{{cite web|url=http://image-duplicator.com/main.php?work_id=0118&year=1963&decade=60|title=Torpedo...LOS!|
On November 7, 1989, ''Torpedo...Los!'' sold at [[Christie's]] for $5.5 million (US${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|5.5|1989|r=1}}}} million in {{Inflation-year|US}} dollars{{inflation-fn|US}}) to Zurich dealer Thomas Ammann, which was a record for a [[work of art]] by Lichtenstein.<ref name=AdKWSARa$M>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1989/11/09/arts/a-de-kooning-work-sets-a-record-at-20.7-million.html|title=A de Kooning Work Sets A Record at $20.7 Million|
==Description==
Measuring {{convert|68|x|80|in|cm|1}}, ''Torpedo...Los!'' is an oil on canvas painting.<ref name=TLLF/> By enlarging the face of the captain relative to the entire field, Lichtenstein makes him more prominent than in the source.<ref name=RLDW/> He retained the source's "clumsiness" in how the secondary figure is presented and replaced the dialogue with a much shorter "cryptic command".<ref name=RLDW/> The original source had dialog related to the repeated torpedoing of the same ship, but Lichtenstein cut the entire speech balloon down to two words. He moved the captain's scar from his nose to his cheek and he made the captain appear more aggressive by depicting him with his mouth wide open, also opting to leave the eye which was not looking through the periscope open. He also made the ship appear to be more technologically sophisticated with a variety of changes.<ref name=PAES>{{cite book|title=Pop Art|author=Shanes, Eric|isbn=978-1-84484-619-1|page=97|date=2009|publisher=Parkstone Press International|chapter=The Plates}}</ref> The scar was actually most readily apparent in panels other than the source from the same story.<ref>{{harvnb|Lobel|2009|page=117|loc="Technology Envisioned: Lichtenstein's Monocularity"}}</ref>
This work exemplifies Lichtenstein's theme relating to vision. Lichtenstein uses a "mechanical viewing device" to present his depiction of technically aided vision.<ref>{{cite book|title=Roy Lichtenstein: All About Art |publisher=Louisiana Museum of Modern Art|editor=Holm, Michael Juul |editor2=Poul Erik Tøjner |editor3=Martin Caiger-Smith|date=2003|isbn=87-90029-85-2|page=85|chapter= Pop according To Lichtenstein |author=Lobel, Michael}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Lobel|2009|page=120|loc="Technology Envisioned: Lichtenstein's Monocularity"}}, "Like ''Torpedo...LOS!'' and ''CRAK!'', each of these works contains the image of a mechanical aid to vision."</ref> The depicted mechanical device, a periscope in this case, forces the vision into a monocular format.<ref>{{harvnb|Lobel|2009|page=119|loc="Technology Envisioned: Lichtenstein's Monocularity"}}</ref> In some of his works such as this, monocularity is a strong theme that is directly embodied although only by allusion.<ref>{{harvnb|Lobel|2009|page=116|loc="Technology Envisioned: Lichtenstein's Monocularity"}}</ref> [[Michael Lobel]] notes that "...his work proposes a dialectical tension between monocular and binocular modes of vision, a tension that operates on the level of gender as well."<ref>{{harvnb|Lobel|2009|page=118|loc="Technology Envisioned: Lichtenstein's Monocularity"}}</ref> The work is regarded as one in which Lichtenstein exaggerated comic book sound effects in common pop art style.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GNRreYO91ogC&q=takka+takka+lichtenstein&pg=PA182|title=Batman Unmasked: Analyzing a Cultural Icon|
==Reception==
This painting exemplifies Lichtenstein's use of the background/foreground shift and ironic colloquialisms in critical commands.<ref>{{harvnb|Waldman|1993|page=97}}</ref> Although most of Lichtenstein's war imagery depicts American war themes, this depicts "a scarred German submarine captain at a battle station".<ref>{{cite book|title=Roy Lichtenstein|publisher=[[Praeger Publishers]]|editor=Coplans, John|isbn=0713907614
==See also==
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==References==
*{{cite book|title=Roy Lichtenstein: October Files|editor=Bader, Graham|publisher=[[The MIT Press]]|date=2009|isbn=978-0-262-01258-4
*{{cite book|title= Roy Lichtenstein|url= https://archive.org/details/roylich00wald|last1=Waldman|first1=Diane|date=1993|publisher=[[Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum]]|isbn=0-89207-108-7|chapter=War Comics, 1962–64
==External links==
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