Skarstedt is pleased to announce Andy Warhol: Art After Art, an exhibition that delves into the myriad influences art history had on Warhol’s oeuvre. This exhibition traces his art historical appropriations throughout the 1970s and 1980s, featuring seminal examples of works from series such as Heads (After Picasso), The Last Supper, Mona Lisa, After de Chirico, and The Scream (After Edvard Munch). By holistically examining Warhol’s dialogues with art history, Art After Art offers new insight into Warhol’s interests: his relationship to icons, both religious and secular; his collapsing of the boundaries between high and low; his interest in mass reproduction; and his perceived place within this grand lineage. The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication authored by Bernard Blistène.
Warhol’s reinterpretations of iconic works simultaneously elevated their status even further while embedding himself into that place of prominence. As Germano Celant observes, “But the history of art is itself a concrete mirage, with its stars and superstars of every age, and Warhol absorbed this too in the magma of his imagination…he turned [these artists] into dead flowers, so that the absolute subjectivity of art became once again a problem of media communication: a reproduction, cut and edited, with unnatural, technological colors.” In using the art of others to speak to contemporary themes, Warhol likewise placed himself within the history of artists appropriating other artists, a theme which began with the likes of Marcel Duchamp and Pablo Picasso, and continues today in artists such as Richard Prince, Sherrie Levine, and Cindy Sherman.
No discussion of art historical lineage would be complete without an ode to Leonardo da Vinci, and no subject would better serve Warhol’s own interests in the iconic than the Mona Lisa. The Mona Lisa was indeed one of Warhol’s earliest subjects, begun in 1963 following the painting’s celebrated visit to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where it was a sensation—a celebrity in its own right, not unlike Marilyn Monroe, whom he was also painting at the time. Warhol returned to the icon again in the 1970s in a suite of paintings that includes Mona Lisa Four Times (1973), a nuanced painting that not only exhibits his continued fascination with the subject, but highlights his more painterly experiments of the 1970s, its deep tones of black and brown anticipating the Reversals he would make at the end of the decade.
Warhol’s religious background, which has only recently become a more prominent focal point in scholarship on the artist, is most directly acknowledged by Warhol himself in his works derived from Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper. Two examples of The Last Supper will appear alongside Mona Lisa Four Times, one illustrating his silkscreened versions of the entirety of the composition, the other a hand-drawn intimate composition focusing entirely on the central Christ figure. In exhibiting two remarkably different examples from this series side-by-side, the viewer can glimpse the ways this particular image fueled Warhol’s many themes. The smaller, hand-drawn example not only exhibits Warhol’s newfound penchant for tracing silkscreened images onto his canvases—a practice he began around the time he started working with Jean-Michel Basquiat—but it provides a quietly tender, contemplative tone, a revelation of his own faith, and a rather vulnerable admission of his feelings in a chaotic and tragic 1980s. Meanwhile, the double silkscreened version of The Last Supper makes plain the notions of celebrity as culture that generated Warhol’s entire oeuvre. This series serves as a prelude to the artist’s own untimely death, encapsulating his fears and the collective grief of his community at that time, while revealing his secret faith. Using a copy of a copy of the original fresco, his choice of source echoes earlier works that explored how mass reproduction can alter our perception and emotional response to images, taking all that is perceived as good and holy within Christ and subverting him to illustrate all of the profane and horrible truths of the world.
This pull towards the mystical and sacred extends even to Warhol’s secular art historical appropriations, as seen in The Two Sisters (After de Chirico) (1982). Using de Chirico’s 1962 painting of Orestes and Pylades as a reference, Warhol infuses de Chirico’s interest in Greek mythology with his own fascination with the mythology of icons, be they historical figures, Hollywood celebrities, or quintessential pieces of Americana. Warhol took up de Chirico as a reference point following the latter artist’s lauded 1982 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, which notably excluded much of de Chirico’s work due to its repetitive nature—an important element of both of their practices that Warhol here nods to in the four-quadrant composition of The Two Sisters.
Warhol’s fascination with religion, the afterlife, and legacy was bound up in fears of his own mortality, informed by his childhood illnesses, the loss of his father at a young age, and the attempt on his life by Valerie Solanas—all events for which similar threads can be found in the life and work of Edvard Munch. In The Scream (After Edvard Munch), Warhol takes Munch’s most iconic image as an eerie kind of memento mori. Likewise, in his old age, Pablo Picasso became more and more focused on his own impending death, and in the 1960s created a series of skeletal drawings of heads, which Warhol used as the basis for a series of paintings. Head (After Picasso) (1985) is itself rendered on a black ground, allowing the sparse head to appear on top of the canvas, as if it was the face of vitality and life itself surging out from the darkness, facing death head-on, defiant and triumphant in its vividness before such darkness.
For all of their myriad connecting influences and ideas, Warhol’s decision to paint each and every one of these works are to some degree a question of where he himself stands in relation to these other masters. Indeed, as he cheekily said in reference to Picasso, “When Picasso died, I read in a magazine that he had made four thousand masterpieces in his lifetime, and I thought, ‘Gee, I could do that in a day.’” Although tongue-in-cheek, Warhol was ever the observer, keenly aware of status and legacy. Perhaps by getting closer to his own idols, he was able to further claim a spot for himself in their pantheon.