Andy Warhol / John Wayne [Unique] (FS II.377) Présenté par Revolver Gallery

Andy WARHOL - John Wayne [Unique] (FS II.377)

Présenté par Revolver Gallery

  • Année
    1986
  • Technique
    Sérigraphie
  • Dimensions de l'image
    0,0 x 0,0 cm / 0.0 x 0.0 in
  • Dimensions du papier
    91,4 x 91,4 cm / 36.0 x 36.0 in
  • Tirage
    Edition of 250
  • Prix
    Sur demande
  • Référence
    FS II.377
  • Visite(s)
    2272
  • État
Andy WARHOL - John Wayne [Unique] (FS II.377)

JOHN WAYNE [UNIQIUE] 377
John Wayne 377 was an icon representing the macho leading man in Hollywood’s prime. He was a fixture in westerns and war movies alike, and considered an All-American hero. The allure of celebrity myths and legends lead Warhol to create the Cowboys and Indians series in 1986. The source image is a publicity photo from the film The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962). In this image, the celebrity status of John Wayne completely overshadows the actor’s real identity, Marion Robert Morrison. In the movie, a reporter takes the story of John Wayne’s character back to his editor and is told, “This is the West, sir; when the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” In this series, that’s what Warhol did. John Wayne 377 was framed for the first time when added to our inventory. It is signed by Andy Warhol on the front in pencil.

JOHN WAYNE 377 BY ANDY WARHOL AS PART OF A LARGER BODY OF WORK
Warhol interspersed recognizable portraits of well-known American heroes– Annie Oakley, Teddy Roosevelt, and General George Custer–with less familiar Native American images and motifs in his ironic commentary on Americans’ collective mythologizing of the historic West. Rather than portraying Native Americans within their historical landscape or Cowboys in their veritable forms, Warhol chose to portray a popular, romanticized version of the American West. The West that he chose to represent is familiar to everyone and can be seen in novels, films, TV series. Warhol’s Cowboys and Indians Suite is an ahistorical representation that mirrors a popular interpretation of the American West.
Andy Warhol created the Cowboys and Indians series during the mid-1980s, arguably his most prolific period. During this time, Warhol was forming bonds with a number of younger artists in the New York art scene including Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julian Schnabel and David Salle. Warhol saw a re-emergence of critical and financial success during this period of his life.

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