Andy Warhol: Graphic Artist Andy Warhol was one of the most famous and successful graphic artists in the last century. His iconic paintings and prints are still remembered and noted today. If you see a brightly colored illustration of a celebrity, who do you think of? Andy Warhol, who was known for his portraits and product-based art work. Even looking at something as simple as a Campbell’s Soup can can trigger the thought of the 60’s artist. Andrew Warhola was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on August 6, 1928. His parents were Slovakian immigrants; his father a construction worker and his mother an embroiderer (biography.com). At the age of 8, Warhol was stricken with Chorea which left him bedridden for a few months. Here, this was where …show more content…
His friends who were also artists, and both gay, considered him to be very “swish”. The 50’s was a very good time for Andy Warhol. With his job as a commercial illustrator, he was able to balance his life with commercial work and avant garde pieces. And in this time, he was able to explore his sexuality, which inspired a lot of sketches, enough to fill book. Just sketches of the male body, either in explicit, or completely innocent poses. The 60’s was Warhol’s big boom in production and fame. In 1962, Warhol “debuted the concept of ‘pop-art’” (biography.com). Here is where he did his famous pieces like the Campbell’s Soup cans and the Elvis prints. Most of his muse was commercial products at this point. He could make art out of anything. For example, the soup cans or the Brillo box. In 1961, Warhol made a piece inspired by Coca-Cola, which became a “pivotal piece in his career” (warhol.org). In 1962, Warhol made created his pieces he’s most famous for; his silkscreen photographic portraits of celebrities. He made art of celebrities like Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor. In this year, Warhol opened a solo pop-art exhibit in Los …show more content…
These were paintings that used images of newspaper articles and even police photographs of car crashes, accidents, and suicides (warhol.org). Around this time, Warhol made more artsy films like “Sleep”, which was a five hour movie just of his friend John Giorno sleeping. He was really able to make art out of anything. In 1964, Warhol opened up The Factory, which was his own art studio in New York City. Occasionally, Warhol would hold parties that the richest of the rich and the socialites of the city would attend. Lou Reed, a musician, even wrote a song about the “hustlers and transvestites” who he met at the club (biography.com). Warhol, who now at this time, became a huge celebrity who attended infamous nightclubs such as Studio 54 and Max’s Kansas City. Towards the end of the 60s, Warhol lost the lease on his Factory and had to move his studio. In 1968, a writer who had worked with Warhol had broken into his studio and shot him, damaging eight organs and leaving him scarred emotionally and physically (warhol.org). For the rest of his life, Warhol needed to wear a surgical
Vincent Van Gogh is one of the world’s greatest and most well-known artists, but when he was alive he considered himself to be a complete failure. It was not until after he died that Van Gogh’s paintings received the recognition they deserved. Today he is thought to be the second best Dutch artist, after Rembrandt. Born in 1853, he was one of the biggest artistic influences of the 19th century. Vincent Van Gogh created a new era of art, he learned to use art to escape his mental illness, and he still continues to inspire artists over 100 years later.
Gallery 19 of the Museum of Modern Art features Pop Art trailblazers of the early 1960s, ranging from Roy Lichtenstein’s “Girl with Ball” to Andy Warhol’s “Gold Marilyn Monroe.” Alongside these emblematic works of art, there hangs a more simplistic piece: a six foot square canvas with three yellow letters, entitled “OOF.” The work of art, created by Ed Ruscha in 1962, is a painting that leaves little room for subjective interpretation as does the majority of his work. Ruscha represented the culture in the 1960s through his contributions to the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art, efforts to redefine what it meant for a painting to be fine art, and interpretation of the Space Race.
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
Now is the time in this period of changes and revolution to use a revolutionary manner of painting and not to paint like before. - Pablo Picasso, 1935. (Barnes)
Warhol, Andy, and Pat Hackett. POPism: the Warhol '60s. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1990. Print.
Crooked Beak of Heaven Mask is a big bird-figure mask from late nineteenth century made by Kwakwaka’wakw tribe. Black is a broad color over the entire mask. Red and white are used partially around its eyes, mouth, nose, and beak. Its beak and mouth are made to be opened, and this leads us to the important fact in both formal analysis and historical or cultural understanding: Transformation theme. Keeping that in mind, I would like to state formal analysis that I concluded from the artwork itself without connecting to cultural background. Then I would go further analysis relating artistic features to social, historical, and cultural background and figure out what this art meant to those people.
The photographs were taken by Warhol himself, as well as his friends and cohorts. He was an accomplished photographer, and had a large collection of photographs of “The Factory” visitors and his friends. He preferred a particular camera, and the Polaroid SX-70 model was kept in production just for him. Artistic photography has been greatly influenced by the artist’s photographic approach to painting combined with his snapshot method of taking pictures. Warhol once asked, “Isn’t life a series of images that change as they repeat themselves?” The question appropriately reflected his ideology of screen printing and his often-used style of
Warhol and his assistant would create a stencil upon a mesh screen, carefully pouring a light sensitive emulsion paint over the stencil then add an black and white photograph. The screen is exposed to light, hardening the emulsion everywhere except where the image overlay has been placed. Warhol used large canvases that he would lay on the floor and continuously create in his gallery space he called "The Silver Factory".
The subject of Andy Warhol 's art is not blatant it 's very subjective, his art was a look not only to himself but into the world of culture. The subject of Warhol 's Art ranged from celebrities to car crashes to even a can of soup, though this may seem unappealing Andy Warhol had a way of turning these basic things into Master works of art. However Leonardo da Vinci 's artwork is vastly superior and was based on a vast array of multiple subjects including not only humans but animals even inventions he made himself. Because of lack of modern technology at the time you know the Vinci subjects had to be special they had to sit in a certain spot looking a certain way for weeks at a time for one piece of work just to be made. The subject of the piece of art that 's trying to be collected is important when they are just put enough time into it its collectability is value just skyrockets at an unprecedented
Born in July of 1882 in New York, Hopper grew up interested in art and encouraged by his parents. After attending both the Correspondence School of Illustrating in New York City and the New York School of Art, Hopper experienced a shift in interest from illustrations to the fine arts1. While studying with the impressionist artist William Merritt Chase and the realistic painter Rober...
Claude Monet was born on November 14, 1840, in Paris, France and moved to LeHavre with his family at age five (Skira 21). As a schoolboy, Monet doodled in the margins of his books. His artistic career began by drawing caricatures of his schoolmasters distorting their faces and profiles outrageously. By the time he was fifteen, people would pay ten or twenty francs for one of his drawings (Skira 22).
Moffat, Charles. A. http://arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/popart/Andy-Warhol.html. November 2007. Web. 22 November 2013. The Art Story Foundation.
For over 60 years, David Hockney has taken the art world by storm. As a painter, draftsman, printmaker, stage designer, and a photographer, Hockney uses a variety of mediums to express different emotions (Pop Art in the UK). Hockney is considered one of the most influential artist in the 20 century, a living legend. Hockney is well known for his photo collages and paintings of Los Angeles swimming pools. He is also known for his use of bold colors that contrast each other, demanding that his work be looked at.
Pablo Picasso is one of the most recognized and popular artists of all time. In Pablo’s paintings and other works of art, he would paint what he was passionate about and you can see his emotions take control throughout his paintings and other works of art. Pablo Picasso works of art include not only paintings but also prints, bronze sculptures, drawings, and ceramics. Picasso was one of the inventors of cubism. ” Les Demoiselles d'Avignon” is one of Picasso famous paintings; this is also one of Pablo’s first pieces of cubism.