The Pop Life of Andy Warhol
On the sixth of August in 1928, I, Andy Warhol, was born as Andrew Warhola, and given into the arms of my parents, Ondrej and Julia Warhola. I have two brothers, John and Pavol Warhola; me being the youngest. My parents are immigrants of Czechoslovakia, and moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States in the early 1920s. (Family Album) At the age of six years old, I suffered from a nervous system disease called chorea, or St. Vitus’ Dance, which left me homebound for an extensive amount of time. During this time, my family drove me away from boredom through drawing, tracing, and printing lessons. (Stencil Revolution) Every time I finished a page in my color book, my mother would reward me with a chocolate bar. (The Prince) This is when I began my interest in art.
During my teenage years, I attended Schenley High School, where I began to take art classes, and eventually began taking them at the Carnegie Museum, too. (The Prince) I kept to myself for the most part, I was not much of a talker. I did not do much for fun, but one time I went to see the personal appearance of Frank Sinatra with Tommy Dorsey. (Interview) In 1942, I lost my father which left me devastated. His one wish was for me to continue my education. (Family Album) My father worked as a coal miner, and saved money for my college tuition. (The Warhol) After I graduated high school in 1945, I attended Carnegie
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I was quickly receiving work from major fashion magazines. (The Warhol) My work premiered in Glamour magazine in September 1949. After that, I began illustrating album covers, fashions advertisements, books, and a variety of other promotional projects. I was engaged by many high fashion agencies: Tiffany & Co., Vogue, Bonwit Teller, Columbia Records, NBC, I.Miller Shoes, Harper’s Bazaar, and The New York Times. (Stencil
He also became a freelance photographer for Vogue. Parks worked for Vogue for a number of years, developing a distinctive style that emphasized the look of models and garments in motion, rather than in static poses.
Andy Warhol was a graphic artist, painter, and film maker, amoung other things, also associated with Pop Art. He moved to New York, around 1950, where he did his first advertisements as a comercial artist and, later, began showing in expositions. One technique employed by Warhol involved repeditive silk screen prints on canvas. He used this method to produce many series of prints with various, easily reconizable images. Between 1962 and 1964 in his self titled studio “The Factory”(Phaidon 484), Warhol produced over two thousand pictures. One of these, Lavender Disaster, was made in 1963 and belonged to a series of pictures all including the same image of an electric chair.
Known for being the father of Pop Art, and a giant in pop culture, Warhol dominated the art scene from the late fifties up until his untimely death in 1987. However Warhol’s influence spread further then the art world, he also was a major player in the LGBT, avant-garde and experimental cinema movements. Born in 1928 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Slovakian immigrant parents, Warhol came from humble beginnings. Becoming widely known for debuting the concept of ‘pop art’ in 1962. Warhol’s reach grew further when he started experimenting with film, becoming a major player in the LGBT, avant-garde and experimental cinema movements. Warhol’s artist studio, known famously as ‘The Factory’ became a hub for experimentation, and a go-to point for celebrities, musicians and trans folk. During this time, Warhol came out as an openly gay man, challenging the status quo of the day, a time when being homosexual was illegal. While also producing highly experiential films such as ‘Blow Job’ (1964) and ‘Sleep’ (1964) which were highly political and provocative, at the time. As art critic Dave Hickey asserts, “Art has political consequences, which is to say, it reorganized society and creates constituencies of people around it” (Hickey, 2007), Andy Warhol’s art and lived experience created a political constituency which can be best recognised in the function of the “Silver Factory” on
Salvador Dali was born on May 11, 1904, in Figueras, Spain (“Salvador Dali”). He became to be known as the most influential and the most famous painter known in the twentieth century. On January 23, 1989, in Figueras, Spain Dali had died from a cardiac arrest at the age of 84 (“Salvador Dali”). However, his paintings and artworks are still around and are located at the Salvador Dali Museum, in Saint Petersburg, Florida. The Salvador Dali Museum holds the largest collection of Dali’s artworks outside of Europe and the museum shelters the artwork with an eighteen-inch concrete wall (“The Building”). Two of the most famous and memorable artworks located in the Salvador Dali Museum are called The Hallucinogenic Toreador and Lincoln in Dalivision. These two artworks have influenced many new inspiring artists to paint and to express his or her self like the influential Dali himself, in which he has captivated many viewers who had visited the Salvador Dali Museum.
Beaton took his inspiration from the most successful magazine photographers of the 1910’s and 1920’s including E.O. Hoppe, Edward Steichen and Baron de Meyer (Victoria & Albert Museum, 2010). Vogue published its first portrait by Beaton in 1928 (Harrison, 1987). It was his exhibition in London that won him this contract that later led much of his work to appear in the magazine. He went on to work with Vogue for over fifty years with both the American and British editions (Patrick, 2009).
Considered as one of the most innovative and influential photographers of the 20th century, Erwin Blumenfeld made a significant contribution to the fashion industry between 1940’s and 1950’s. His photographs were on the postwar pages of Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Cosmopolitan, Life and Look magazines. Besides the fashion photography, his oeuvre includes portraits of celebrities, fine art photography, as black-and-white nudes, drawings and Dada collages. The undiscovered part of his work consists of the hundreds of Dadaist photomontages produced between 1916 and 1933, never exhibited during his life, and
Warhol, Andy. The Philosophy of Andy Warhol: (from A to B and Back Again). Orlando: Harcourt, 2006. Print.
Andy Warhol’s rise to fame was not easy. Haunted by his profession as a commercial artist in New York he struggled to gain recognition as a real artist, yet he kept trying. He experimented with different styles of art hoping to get a solo exhibition at a gallery. One of Warhol’s experimental styles was influenced by comic books; he made paintings that included characters from comics, along with though balloons. Warhol was greatly disappointed after seeing paintings of an artist by the name of Roy Lichtenstein, whose work resembled comic books as well. Fearing that his comic style paintings were inferior to those of Lichtenstein’s, Warhol moved on to another motif – painting consumer goods, specifically Campbell’s Soup cans. His original 32 paintings of Campbell’s canned soup (titled Campbell’s Soup Cans) played a major role in defining Andy Warhol’s artistic career. Apart from helping him get his first solo exhibition the Campbell’s Soup Cans steered the direction of Warhol’s future work.
Muriel King showed us Fashion in a way never seen before but showed us her creativity in another art form painting.Muriel did many things to contribute to the fashion industry today.She was one of the first known woman fashion designers in America.Her career in the fashion industry lasted for over four decades.Her artwork traveled the world and inspired other people to show their creativity.She used one type of art and formed it into another form creating a masterpiece.She traveled around the world and worked with big fashion companies sharing her artwork. Muriel was born in the Bay view,Washington in 1900.She went to school as an art student and went to the University of Washington.She learned a lot at the university and had the chance to experience designing costumes.She would on the side design theater costumes.That is when her whole fashion career started.She moved to New York in the early 1920’s to start her designing career.She started off with becoming a fashion illustrator for the magazines Vogue and Harper's Bazaar.In 1932 she opened up her own shop at East 61st Street in N...
Vincent Van Gogh is celebrated today as the greatest Dutch painter, besides Rembrandt (“Vincent Willem”). Born in Holland on March 30, 1853, Van Gogh had five other siblings and two parents, and although his mother was an artist, he never bothered with art until much later in his life (“Vincent Willem”). Van Gogh had many shortcomings in his little and dismal time on earth and it was not until his late twenties, after all else had failed, that he gave art a chance. Thanks to the help of his older brother Theo, Van Gogh was able to put all of his emotions and mental worries into productive use, creating masterpieces that are sold today for millions of dollars (“Vincent Willem”). Although he is hugely successful today, Van Gogh had little to no fame in his lifetime and he struggled immensely with his mental state of mind for many years. Ultimately his mental illness (some believe there were more than one) lead to his untimely death, but his turbulent state of mind also helped him to create magnificent images that are revered as some of the greatest pieces of art of today.
Andy Warhol's experiences throughout his difficult and poverty-stricken early life are one among many possible explanations for Warhol's addiction to materialism later on in his life. Born on August 6, 1928 into the slums of Pittsburgh, Andy Warhol was the fourth child of working-class Slovakian immigrant parents who barely spoke English. As a child, Warhol developed chorea, an illness which causes abnormal involuntary movements. Consequently, this contributed to his isolation as a child as he was often bed-ridden and thus became an outcast at school (Gale American Decades). During his early years, he also developed a fascination for fame and recognition as he would constantly amass pictures of celebrities and movie sta...
Vincent van Gogh is considered one of the greatest dutch painters after Rembrandt. Even though he remained poor and virtually unknown throughout his life, just one of his paintings today in auction(the famous Starry Night) is worth over 80 million dollars in auction. In just over a decade Vincent created approximately 2100 paintings, including 860 oil paintings, most of them in the last two years of his life. All of his paintings consist of highly expressive and dramatic brush work which contributed to the inspiration of modern art today. Although is paintings are sold for millions of dollars all over the world today, he only sold one painting in his life time and became famous after his suicide at age 37. His suicide was after years of his
Pablo Picasso was born october 25 of 1881, in Malaga spain. He died on april 8th 1973 in Mougins France. He was an amazing sculptor, ceramicist, stage designer, and poet. He spent most of his adult life in france. During the 20th century Pablo Picasso was one of the most influential artists of the time period. He co-founded the Cubist movement, the invention of constructed sculpture, Also co founded the collage. Picasso, Henri Matisse and Marcel Duchamp are regarded as the three artists who most defined the revolutionary developments in the plastic arts in the opening decades of the 20th century. Pablo Picasso was more than an artists he changed the name of art as we know it.
theartstroy.org. 2013. The web. 22 November 2013. Warhol, Andy.
It took quite a long journey to get into fashion photography it was like two years of shooting. I studied at university with a lot of amazingly talented designers. They had collections to show and photo-students were sick of being forced to photograph the "commercial design", they we interested more in their personal art. I have shown my portrait work of the fashion designers and I was asked to take pictures of their designs with models. They told me everything