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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Peachy at The Met: Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years September 18—December 31, 2012 Exhibition Location: The Tisch Galleries at the Metropolitan Museum of Art Our Coverage Sponsored by Cosmopolitan Dental, Official Dentist of Whom You Know

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Peachy Deegan has always admired the work of Andy Warhol so naturally she was excited to see this exhibit, the latest and greatest by The Met!  It begins in 1961 with Warhol showing his work for the first time publicly in a window featuring fashion for women in a New York department store: this was far before our time to see a New Window but we can admire such a start!  Clearly his art influenced many and they are included in this show, but his work lords over all of them.  We just love the pop art of Warhol.

This exhibit has it all right down to a "Chanel" chainsaw.  Portraiture, Celebrity and Power was the title of the room we liked the best-Marilyn, Elvis, Jackie, Liz...and of those that Warhol influenced, the work we liked best was of Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice by Belgian artist Luc Tuymans.  Also don't miss the Nan Kempner with the green background by Warhol-we LOVED the exhibit of Nan's clothes by the Met a few years back.

Coke bottles, Campbell Soup Cans...From Jackie Kennedy to Marilyn Monroe and everything in between, Warhol appreciated the everyday like Norman Rockwell featured earlier today, and had his own distinct style.  And at the end, you get a piece of candy-you know who had to have a green one:


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For decades, critics have observed that Andy Warhol’s influence is dominant in contemporary art, but as of yet no exhibition has explored its full nature or extent.Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years at The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the first major exhibition to do so through approximately 45 works by Warhol alongside 100 works by some 60 other artists. This innovative presentation, structured in five thematic sections, juxtaposes prime examples of Warhol’s paintings, sculpture, and films with those by other artists who in key ways reinterpret, respond, or react to his groundbreaking work. The exhibition shows the dialogue and conversation between works of art and artists across generations. 







The exhibition is made possible by Morgan Stanley. 

Additional support is provided by the Gail and Parker Gilbert Fund and The Daniel and Estrellita Brodsky Foundation. 

The exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts 
and the Humanities. 

Regarding Warhol opens with Warhol’s fascination and engagement with the imagery of everyday life in the section “Daily News: From Banality to Disaster.” His interest in commonplace or banal subject matter found in newspapers and magazines led him to create his early depictions of tabloid advertisements and press coverage of disasters. These works were clearly influential for other artists working at the time, such as Sigmar Polke and Hans Haacke, who took on similar subject matter. Key examples by younger contemporary artists such as Vik Muniz and Sarah Lucas are indicative of artists’ continued engagement with the news of the day. Also explored in this section is Warhol’s interest in items of American consumer culture of the 1960s (Brillo Soap Pads Box, 1964) and its connection to later artists who appropriate objects from the supermarket or the department store, including Jeff Koons, Robert Gober, and Damien Hirst. 

Just like his interest in the packaging of consumer goods, Warhol was fascinated by the “packaging” of celebrities, which for him evolved into an engagement with portrait-making that is explored in the second section of the exhibition, “Portraiture: Celebrity and Power.” The best of Warhol’s notable portraits of celebrities, such as Red Jackie (1964) andTurquoise Marilyn (1964), are paired with contemporary examples by Elizabeth Peyton, Karen Kilimnik, and Cindy Sherman. Warhol’s portrayals of artists, poets, and musicians of his day are installed alongside similar examples by leading artists including Alex Katz and Chuck Close. Links between Warhol’s practice of society portraiture of the 1970s, as well as his artistic engagement with political figures (particularly Mao [1973]) and the work of later artists, are also explored here. 

The exhibition’s third section, “Queer Studies: Camouflage and Shifting Identities,” outlines Warhol’s importance as an artist who broke new ground in representing issues of sexuality and gender in the post-war period. Warhol’s enigmatic persona developed over the course of his career is well represented by his last Self-Portrait (1986). In this work, made the year before his untimely death, his visage is concealed by a veil of camouflage. This iconic work opens a section devoted to frank representations of the male body that share their subject and composition with Warhol’s Torso from Behind (1977)—as in David Hockney’s Boy about to Take a Shower (1964) or Robert Gober’s Untitled (1990). This section also strives to represent a new openness toward different varieties of queer identity that Warhol’s oeuvre ushered in, largely through work by photographers such as Catherine Opie, Richard Avedon, Peter Hujar, or Robert Mapplethorpe. 

The last two sections of the exhibition deal in diverse ways with the proliferation of images so inherent to Warhol’s projects. In “Consuming Images: Appropriation, Abstraction, and Seriality,” Warhol’s groundbreaking use of preexisting photographic sources, often endlessly repeated (Baseball, 1962), his appropriation of art history (Mona Lisa, 1963), and his interest in abstraction (Oxidation Painting, 1978), for example, are grouped with work by Pictures Generation artists such as Richard Prince and Cindy Sherman for their uses of appropriation, or with contemporary painters like Christopher Wool, whose patterned painting Untitled plays with all-over abstraction and seriality in Warholian ways. 

For the final section of the show, “No Boundaries: Business, Collaboration, and Spectacle,” Warhol’s interest in artistic partnership through filmmaking, magazine publishing, and design is highlighted. Also foregrounded is his fascination with creating environments that envelop the viewer entirely—the Gesamtkunstwerk of his all-overFlowers installations and his wallpapered gallery walls inspired other artists to extend their practice beyond the traditional spaces of the rectangular canvas into the world beyond. The works in this section range from Polly Apfelbaum’s floor-installed fabric piece, Pink Crush(2007), to a selection of Ryan Trecartin’s collaboratively created videos. 

Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years is organized by Mark Rosenthal, guest curator, with Marla Prather, Curator, Ian Alteveer, Assistant Curator, and Rebecca Lowery, Research Assistant, in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

The catalogue accompanying the exhibition includes an essay by Mark Rosenthal, 13 artist interviews by Prather, and additional contributions by Alteveer and Lowery. It is published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and distributed by Yale University Press. 

The catalogue is made possible in part by the Mary and Louis S. Myers Foundation Endowment Fund. 

In conjunction with the exhibition, a variety of education programs will be offered. Highlights include a Sunday at the Met program on October 21, at 3:00 p.m.; gallery talks on the permanent collection on the theme of “influence,” including talks by exhibition artists Deborah Kass and Kalup Linzy; and films. 

An audio tour, part of the Metropolitan's Audio Guide program, will be available for rental ($7, $6 for members, and $5 for children under 12). 

The Audio Guide program is sponsored by Bloomberg. 

For the duration of the exhibition, two of Warhol’s Ten-Foot Flowers (1967) from The Met’s collection will be on view in the Great Hall. 

The exhibition will be featured on the Museum’s website at www.metmuseum.org.






























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