Andy

Warhol

Who Was Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol was a successful magazine and ad illustrator who became a leading artist of the 1960s Pop art movements. He ventured into a wide variety of art forms, including performance art, filmmaking, video installations and writing, and controversially blurred the lines between fine art and mainstream aesthetics.

Art

What was so special about andy's art?

Andy Warhol is known for his bright, colourful paintings and prints of subjects ranging from celebrities including Marilyn Monroe and Mohammed Ali, to everyday products such as cans of soup and Brillo pads, but behind these iconic images are some surprising approaches and ideas. He worked with almost all meidums and explored them in new ways to he the next new thing. this resulteed in new pop art of the time.

Portraits

Fun Facts

Andy rejected the system. Andy Warhol was king of the Pop Art movement, and his piece titled Marilyn Diptych is emblematic of this movement. Warhol’s pop art showed rejection of the overriding system of art. Some of the colored Marilyns are off, and many of the black-and-white Marilyns are distorted. In this sense, Warhol’s art shows that he straddled the fine line between creative modifier and artistic genius.

Studio

Fun Facts

He Was The Victim Of Attempted Murder! Valeria Jean Solanas, a radical feminist, wrote a notorious work, SCUM Manifesto, which urged women to break the government and destroy men. In the 1960s, she approached Andy Warhol with a script for Up Your Ass, which he later stole or lost. As compensation, Warhol cast her in his film, I, A Man. In the late 1960s, she grew more paranoid about her work. On June 3, 1968, Solanas entered the Factory and shot Warhol. She ended up turning herself in afterwards, and she was treated for paranoid Schizophrenia. Warhol was kept in a New York hospital for weeks after to recover.

andy and friends

Andy and Drag

He Was An Integral Part Of Drag Culture. In the 1960s when drag queens were still very much on the periphery, Warhol began to think about them in new ways. Drag queens were frequent visitors at his Factory, and they became an integral part of his art machine. They were no longer seen as freaks, but rather incorporated into the artistic movement brewing at the Factory. In fact, Warhol posed in drag a number of times in photographs. Warhol brought drag queens from the outskirts into the center of the new burgeoning art world.

Interviews