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PHOTOGRAPHIES 1976-1987​

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ANDY WARHOL

Thierry Marlat Gallery is delighted to present Andy Warhol: Portraits and Landscapes, an exhibition selected of over 200 unique 10” x 8” black and white photographs, almost all of which have not been seen before. Shot during the last ten years of his life, between 1976 and 1987, they give a remarkable insight into Warholʼs photographic practice and his preoccupation with documenting everyday life. Taken as he moved around Manhattan, and other cities including London, literally snapping everything that came his way, they portray a collection of commonplace objects including toilets, chairs, sidewalks, garbage, storefronts, shirts, teacups, mannequins, sausages, toys, place settings and aeroplanes.

The exhibition reveals Warhol as the lover of the mundane, who used a camera and tape recorder to collect traces of what surrounded him in his final decade. It also reminds us of the importance of photography in Warhol’s practice and how he should be viewed first and foremost as a photographer rather than a painter. Photographs were used as the source material for almost all his paintings and prints. Having used publicity photographs and magazine images as the basis of his compositions throughout the 1950s and 1960s, during the 1970s, Warhol picked up his own camera and kept snapping until he died.

Evident in works including Untitled (Apples), Untitled, (Cups and Saucers), and Untitled (Dog Food Cans), is Warhol’s delight in the aesthetic of repetition. Echoing the silk-screen paintings of Campbell’s soup cans and dollar bills, these photographs are a celebration of the ordinary, aiming to “democratize all experiences by translating them into images” (Susan Sontag, On Photography, 1977). In examining Warhol’s exploration of the banal, Bluttal reveals the artist’s talent for formal composition. Works such as Untitled (Flea Market, Stuffed Animals), Untitled (Street), and Untitled (Litter), all evoke the inherent melancholy of objects. As Warhol casts his eye over hotel mini bars, liquor bottles, empty chairs and emergency exits, he creates non-figurative portraits and urban landscapes.

 

[The] very celebrity of Warhol, his sheer, inescapable fame, has often disguised the fact that he was one of the most serious, and one of the most important, artists of the twentieth century. He quite simply changed how we see all the world around us. He had an uncanny ability to select precise images that still have great resonance today.

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