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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 31

Andy Warhol

Schätzpreis
1.000.000 $ - 1.500.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 31

Andy Warhol

Schätzpreis
1.000.000 $ - 1.500.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Map of the Eastern U.S.S.R. Missile Bases 1985-86 synthetic polymer paint, silkscreen inks on canvas 58 x 80 in. (147.3 x 203.2 cm.) Stamped by The Estate of Andy Warhol and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. and numbered PA10.583 along the overlap.
Provenance Stellan Holm Gallery, New York Van de Weghe Fine Art, New York Gagosian Gallery, New York Catalogue Essay In his final decade of life, Andy Warhol turned away from the celebrity-based content of his work in the 1970s and chose to reflect upon an earlier period of his artistic career, creating works rich with allusions to some of his first pieces. Many, such as the Reversal series, were his first pieces, iconic images on their own, turned into the photonegative versions of themselves. These works give us a glimpse of an artist in his last years of work, choosing to examine his oeuvre as a phenomenon and draw his inspiration from it. Some works that Warhol produced in his final days, however, drew their imagery from thematic constants in his life. The present lot, Map of Eastern U.S.S.R. Missile Bases, 1985-1986, is one of the latter: a terrifying and poignant portrait of continuing trauma, both national and personal. Trauma, as an influence, seemed to follow Warhol throughout his life. Many of his early Disaster series paintings, including his silkscreens of car accidents and the mortal dread of the electric chair, came into existence because of Warhol’s inability to cope with the violence perpetrated against both him and the peoples of the world. A minor incident in 1962 stayed with him through the rest of his career: “We walked outside and somebody threw a cherry bomb right in front of us, in this big crowd. And there was blood. I saw blood on people and all over. I felt like I was bleeding all over. I saw in the paper last week that there are more people throwing them—it's just part of the scene—and hurting people.” (The artist in interview with G. Swenson, Art News, 1963, n.p.) Indeed, as a theme, nuclear war represented the logical extent of horror and dread, one from whose trauma no one could possibly recover. Warhol found a cathartic solution in presenting himself as his objects of dread, putting forth a version of himself in art that reflected the pain that he carried around with him. “In 1965 he would commemorate the bomb and, indirectly, his birth, in a silkscreen painting, Atomic Bomb, an explosive self-portrait—an image of Andy as international trauma. Trauma was the motor of his life, and speech the first wound: painful for him to speak, to write, to be interviewed.” (W. Koestenbaum, “Andy Warhol”, The New York Times, September 16, 2001). This stayed true until the nuclear buildup of the 1980s, when the world felt itself hurtling toward an inevitable nuclear showdown between the United States and the USSR. The present lot is a fascinating response to Ronald Reagan’s “evil empire” speech, which stated the mortal enmity of the USA and USSR in no uncertain terms. The piece itself is stark in its use of only black and white polymer upon a white canvas, colors that conjure up the wintry deserts of the Soviet Union during the cold season. Perhaps the most puzzling aspect of the piece is its origins—though it seems to be a clipping from a magazine or newspaper, its feel is of a piece with the 1960s rather than the 1980s, suggesting that Warhol maintained a collection of clippings throughout the years, strategically exhuming one for explicit purposes of creation nearly two decades after he cut it out. The composition of the image itself is a map of missile bases for use in a nuclear attack. However, as the map is printed in English, it is necessarily a document of war, a plot for the destruction of the Soviet Union’s missile bases by the United States. The comic book-like drawing is imperfect, its geographic boundaries sometimes scrawled haphazardly, its letters shaped by hand. But, as it was created with the express purpose of mapping out the location of Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) and Intermediate-range Ballistic Missiles (IRBMs), its lack of professional draftsmanship does not diminish its terrifying power. As we witness the massive range of the destructive powers of American forces, we soon d

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 31
Auktion:
Datum:
11.11.2013
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Map of the Eastern U.S.S.R. Missile Bases 1985-86 synthetic polymer paint, silkscreen inks on canvas 58 x 80 in. (147.3 x 203.2 cm.) Stamped by The Estate of Andy Warhol and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. and numbered PA10.583 along the overlap.
Provenance Stellan Holm Gallery, New York Van de Weghe Fine Art, New York Gagosian Gallery, New York Catalogue Essay In his final decade of life, Andy Warhol turned away from the celebrity-based content of his work in the 1970s and chose to reflect upon an earlier period of his artistic career, creating works rich with allusions to some of his first pieces. Many, such as the Reversal series, were his first pieces, iconic images on their own, turned into the photonegative versions of themselves. These works give us a glimpse of an artist in his last years of work, choosing to examine his oeuvre as a phenomenon and draw his inspiration from it. Some works that Warhol produced in his final days, however, drew their imagery from thematic constants in his life. The present lot, Map of Eastern U.S.S.R. Missile Bases, 1985-1986, is one of the latter: a terrifying and poignant portrait of continuing trauma, both national and personal. Trauma, as an influence, seemed to follow Warhol throughout his life. Many of his early Disaster series paintings, including his silkscreens of car accidents and the mortal dread of the electric chair, came into existence because of Warhol’s inability to cope with the violence perpetrated against both him and the peoples of the world. A minor incident in 1962 stayed with him through the rest of his career: “We walked outside and somebody threw a cherry bomb right in front of us, in this big crowd. And there was blood. I saw blood on people and all over. I felt like I was bleeding all over. I saw in the paper last week that there are more people throwing them—it's just part of the scene—and hurting people.” (The artist in interview with G. Swenson, Art News, 1963, n.p.) Indeed, as a theme, nuclear war represented the logical extent of horror and dread, one from whose trauma no one could possibly recover. Warhol found a cathartic solution in presenting himself as his objects of dread, putting forth a version of himself in art that reflected the pain that he carried around with him. “In 1965 he would commemorate the bomb and, indirectly, his birth, in a silkscreen painting, Atomic Bomb, an explosive self-portrait—an image of Andy as international trauma. Trauma was the motor of his life, and speech the first wound: painful for him to speak, to write, to be interviewed.” (W. Koestenbaum, “Andy Warhol”, The New York Times, September 16, 2001). This stayed true until the nuclear buildup of the 1980s, when the world felt itself hurtling toward an inevitable nuclear showdown between the United States and the USSR. The present lot is a fascinating response to Ronald Reagan’s “evil empire” speech, which stated the mortal enmity of the USA and USSR in no uncertain terms. The piece itself is stark in its use of only black and white polymer upon a white canvas, colors that conjure up the wintry deserts of the Soviet Union during the cold season. Perhaps the most puzzling aspect of the piece is its origins—though it seems to be a clipping from a magazine or newspaper, its feel is of a piece with the 1960s rather than the 1980s, suggesting that Warhol maintained a collection of clippings throughout the years, strategically exhuming one for explicit purposes of creation nearly two decades after he cut it out. The composition of the image itself is a map of missile bases for use in a nuclear attack. However, as the map is printed in English, it is necessarily a document of war, a plot for the destruction of the Soviet Union’s missile bases by the United States. The comic book-like drawing is imperfect, its geographic boundaries sometimes scrawled haphazardly, its letters shaped by hand. But, as it was created with the express purpose of mapping out the location of Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) and Intermediate-range Ballistic Missiles (IRBMs), its lack of professional draftsmanship does not diminish its terrifying power. As we witness the massive range of the destructive powers of American forces, we soon d

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 31
Auktion:
Datum:
11.11.2013
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
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