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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 139

Andy Warhol

Photographs
17.05.2012
Schätzpreis
18.000 £ - 22.000 £
ca. 28.641 $ - 35.005 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 139

Andy Warhol

Photographs
17.05.2012
Schätzpreis
18.000 £ - 22.000 £
ca. 28.641 $ - 35.005 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Joan Collins, c. 1985; Jane Fonda c. 1980; Carly Simon, c. 1970s; Karen Kain, c. 1983 Five colour Polaroid prints. Each 9.5 × 7.3 cm (3 3/4 × 2 7/8 in) Four with copyright credit blindstamp in the margin; each with 'Estate of Andy Warhol' and 'Andy Warhol Foundation' credit stamps on the verso.
Provenance The Andy Warhol Foundation, New York Literature (i, ii, iv, v) Andy Warhol Photography, exh. cat., The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, Hamburg Kunsthalle, 1999, pp. 182–83 (variants) (iv, v) Andy Warhol Polaroids: Celebrities and Self-Portraits, exh. cat., Starmach Gallery, Krakow, 2000, pl. 51 and 52 (variants) Catalogue Essay “Mr Land invented this great camera called a Polaroid. And it just takes the face of the person. There is something about the camera that makes the person look just right. They usually come out great. I take at least 200 pictures and then I choose. Sometimes I take half a picture and a lip from another picture. Sometimes it’s hard, sometimes it’s easy.” ANDY WARHOL Photography was central to Andy Warhol’s life and work. In 1970 he purchased a Big Shot camera that accompanied him everywhere as he relentlessly and obsessively documented his illustrious social circle. The Polaroids were often used as the basis for his silkscreen portraits, their distinctive saturation directing the stark contrasts of the canvases. Andy Grundberg has noted, however, they are far more than mere ephemera to the working process: “They are also evidence of Warhol’s lifelong fascination with the camera’s own transformative powers. For him, a photograph was more than a record of whatever reality lay on front of the lens; it was no less than a fictionalising tool that embodied the very aspiration on which he staked his career: it could actively manufacture celebrity and, ultimately, identify itself.” (A. Grundberg and V. Fremont, Andy Warhol Polaroids, 1971–1986, New York: Pace/MacGill, 1992) At odds with the determinedly machine-like production of the canvases, the appeal of the Polaroids lies in their unique, tangible quality. They are at once disarmingly honest and curiously unrevealing – the sitter is confronted by the camera’s stark gaze, but distanced by their celebrity. As seen in the current group lot, in which the women’s immaculately prepared make-up contrasts with the snatched intimacy of the Polaroid, Warhol perfectly captures the polarities of the glamorous and the real, the vulnerable and the knowing, that demonstrate his inimitable understanding of the cult of celebrity. Read More Artist Bio Andy Warhol American • 1928 - 1987 A seminal figure in the Pop Art movement of the early 1960s, Andy Warhol's paintings and screenprints are iconic beyond the scope of Art History, having become universal signifiers of an age. An early career in commercial illustration led to Warhol's appropriation of imagery from American popular culture and insistent concern with the superficial wonder of permanent commodification that yielded a synthesis of word and image, of art and the everyday. Warhol's obsession with creating slick, seemingly mass-produced artworks led him towards the commercial technique of screenprinting, which allowed him to produce large editions of his painted subjects. The clean, mechanical surface and perfect registration of the screenprinting process afforded Warhol a revolutionary absence of authorship that was crucial to the Pop Art manifesto. View More Works

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 139
Auktion:
Datum:
17.05.2012
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Joan Collins, c. 1985; Jane Fonda c. 1980; Carly Simon, c. 1970s; Karen Kain, c. 1983 Five colour Polaroid prints. Each 9.5 × 7.3 cm (3 3/4 × 2 7/8 in) Four with copyright credit blindstamp in the margin; each with 'Estate of Andy Warhol' and 'Andy Warhol Foundation' credit stamps on the verso.
Provenance The Andy Warhol Foundation, New York Literature (i, ii, iv, v) Andy Warhol Photography, exh. cat., The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, Hamburg Kunsthalle, 1999, pp. 182–83 (variants) (iv, v) Andy Warhol Polaroids: Celebrities and Self-Portraits, exh. cat., Starmach Gallery, Krakow, 2000, pl. 51 and 52 (variants) Catalogue Essay “Mr Land invented this great camera called a Polaroid. And it just takes the face of the person. There is something about the camera that makes the person look just right. They usually come out great. I take at least 200 pictures and then I choose. Sometimes I take half a picture and a lip from another picture. Sometimes it’s hard, sometimes it’s easy.” ANDY WARHOL Photography was central to Andy Warhol’s life and work. In 1970 he purchased a Big Shot camera that accompanied him everywhere as he relentlessly and obsessively documented his illustrious social circle. The Polaroids were often used as the basis for his silkscreen portraits, their distinctive saturation directing the stark contrasts of the canvases. Andy Grundberg has noted, however, they are far more than mere ephemera to the working process: “They are also evidence of Warhol’s lifelong fascination with the camera’s own transformative powers. For him, a photograph was more than a record of whatever reality lay on front of the lens; it was no less than a fictionalising tool that embodied the very aspiration on which he staked his career: it could actively manufacture celebrity and, ultimately, identify itself.” (A. Grundberg and V. Fremont, Andy Warhol Polaroids, 1971–1986, New York: Pace/MacGill, 1992) At odds with the determinedly machine-like production of the canvases, the appeal of the Polaroids lies in their unique, tangible quality. They are at once disarmingly honest and curiously unrevealing – the sitter is confronted by the camera’s stark gaze, but distanced by their celebrity. As seen in the current group lot, in which the women’s immaculately prepared make-up contrasts with the snatched intimacy of the Polaroid, Warhol perfectly captures the polarities of the glamorous and the real, the vulnerable and the knowing, that demonstrate his inimitable understanding of the cult of celebrity. Read More Artist Bio Andy Warhol American • 1928 - 1987 A seminal figure in the Pop Art movement of the early 1960s, Andy Warhol's paintings and screenprints are iconic beyond the scope of Art History, having become universal signifiers of an age. An early career in commercial illustration led to Warhol's appropriation of imagery from American popular culture and insistent concern with the superficial wonder of permanent commodification that yielded a synthesis of word and image, of art and the everyday. Warhol's obsession with creating slick, seemingly mass-produced artworks led him towards the commercial technique of screenprinting, which allowed him to produce large editions of his painted subjects. The clean, mechanical surface and perfect registration of the screenprinting process afforded Warhol a revolutionary absence of authorship that was crucial to the Pop Art manifesto. View More Works

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 139
Auktion:
Datum:
17.05.2012
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
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