Bingo ideas / For art lovers

Famous Pop Artists Bingo Cards

A bright way to review the pop art movement. A caller reads a famous work, a signature style, or a trademark subject, and players mark the artist who made it — from Warhol to Lichtenstein — with the first to a line winning.

Free to design and print · edit any square · 3×3, 4×4, or 5×5

Famous pop artists bingo makes an art history review as vivid as the movement itself. Start from a bold neon template, keep the artists below or match the ones in your lesson, and you have cards ready to print in a couple of minutes for class or a gallery night.

Because every card is shuffled from the same square list, no two players get the same grid — so a whole class or trivia table can play together while the caller describes the soup cans, comic panels, and silkscreens and the room names the maker.

Squares for a pop-artists card
  • Andy Warhol
  • Roy Lichtenstein
  • Keith Haring
  • Jasper Johns
  • Robert Rauschenberg
  • Claes Oldenburg
  • James Rosenquist
  • Richard Hamilton
  • Tom Wesselmann
  • David Hockney
  • Yayoi Kusama
  • Jeff Koons
  • Peter Blake
  • Wayne Thiebaud
  • Eduardo Paolozzi
  • Mel Ramos
  • Allen Jones
  • Marisol Escobar
  • Edward Ruscha
  • Romero Britto
  • Takashi Murakami
  • Corita Kent
  • Pauline Boty
  • George Segal

These are just a starting point — swap in your own words in the editor before you print.

Ideas for your game
  • Describe the work, not the name

    Read a clue like "soup cans and silkscreens" or "comic-strip dots" and let players find the artist. It turns the card into a real review of signature styles and famous pieces.

  • Pair it with a slideshow

    Project images of well-known works and call them out one by one. Players match each piece to its maker, which connects the names to the actual art on screen.

  • Print a set or play live

    Print cards for a classroom or studio night, or share one link and a QR code so everyone plays from their phones while you run the slideshow at the front.

Editable and printable

Edit every square. Open the card in the editor, keep the suggested squares or replace them with your own words, emoji, or photos, and pick a theme that fits the day.

Print a whole set at once. Each card is shuffled from the same square list, so every player gets a unique grid. Print to standard letter or A4 paper on any home printer — or order professionally printed cards shipped to your door.

Or play live. Share one link and a QR code and the whole room plays from their phones, in person or over video.

Questions

How do I make pop artists bingo for free?

Open the editor, pick a bold theme, keep the suggested artists or swap in the ones from your lesson, then print. A basic set is free to make and print for your group.

Which artists are included?

The default list covers central figures of the pop art movement across the US, UK, and beyond. Edit any square to focus on one country, decade, or your own curriculum.

Can I print these on regular paper?

Yes. The print view is sized for standard letter and A4 paper, so any printer works. You can also order professionally printed cards for a gallery or studio event.

How do I make it more challenging?

Call by signature technique or lesser-known works rather than names, and use a full 5×5 grid. For beginners, read artist names directly and pick a smaller grid.