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- <text id=93HT0831>
- <title>
- 1987: Died:Andy Warhol
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1987 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- March 9, 1987
- A Caterer of Repetition and Glut
- Andy Warhol: 1928-1987
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The tabloids gave Andy Warhol a Viking funeral last week, as
- well they might. At 58 he suffered cardiac arrest following
- gall-bladder surgery. To the end, he remained surrounded by an
- aura of popular fame such as no other American artist had every
- known in his or her lifetime--a flash-card recognizability that
- almost rivaled Picasso's. Millions of Americans who could not
- have picked Jasper Johns or Henri Matisse from a police lineup
- could identify that pale, squarish, loose-lipped face with its
- acne, blinking gaze and silvery wig.
- </p>
- <p> He was, after all, that weird guy who did those soup cans a
- quarter of a century (was it really that long?) ago. The
- working-class hero, son of an immigrant Czech coal miner named
- Warhola in Pittsburgh, who for a time acquired a court that
- seemed almost Habsburgian in scope if not in distinction: the
- Velazquez dwarfs of the Factory. The guy in the photo with
- Madonna, Liza, Jackie O. The aesthete who said money was the
- most important think in his life and in the future everyone
- would be famous for 15 minutes, thus offering a tacky sort of
- transcendence to every hair stylist, fledgling actor and art
- student in America. The ageless child of media fame who made
- scores of underground films in which often nothing happened
- (Empire offered eight hours of staring at the Empire State
- Building) and who published his own magazine, Interview. Andy,
- the living transparency, with his face pressed to the shop
- window of the American dream and his head full of schemes to
- titillate an aging, youth-obsessed American culture.
- </p>
- <p> Warhol's early works were the ones that mattered. He began as
- a commercial artist, became for a time (between about 1962 and
- 1968) a fine artist with something akin to genius and then
- lapsed back into a barely disguised form of commercial art. His
- sense of timing, his grip on how to give an image graphic clout,
- and his fixation on style as an end in itself all came out of
- his years of advertising and display work during the '50s for
- I. Miller, Lord & Taylor, Glamour and Vogue. By the end of this
- period he was rich, professionally famous and yearning for
- recognition as a serious artist.
- </p>
- <p> The opportunity came with the Pop movement in the early '60s.
- His contribution was the image taken from advertising or
- tabloid journalism: grainy, immediate, a slice of unexplained
- life half-registered over and over, full of slippages and
- visual stutters. Marilyn Monroe repeated 50 times, 200
- Campbell's soup cans, a canvas filled edge to edge with effigies
- of Liz, Jackie, dollar bills or Elvis. Absurd though these
- pictures looked at first, Warhol's fixation on repetition and
- glut emerged as the most powerful statement ever made by an
- American artist on the subject of a consumer economy. The
- cranking out of designed objects of desire was so faithfully
- mirrored in Warhol's images and so approvingly mimicked in his
- sense of culture that no one, in fact, could be sure what he
- thought.
- </p>
- <p> He was also, from the outset, much possessed by death.
- Warhol's multiple-image disasters of the early '60s based on
- news photos of fatal car wrecks are suffused with dread and
- compassion beneath their icily casual surface. Such works
- looked amazingly raw, frank and direct when they were made.
- More than 20 years later, they still do.
- </p>
- <p> Then in 1968, one of Warhol's hangers-on--a crazed actress named
- Valeria Solanis--shot and wounded him with a .32. Neither his
- health nor his talent would fully recover. There had been one
- Warhol before the shooting; another would emerge after it. The
- former had been the onlooker, both fascinated and wounded by
- media culture and its power to dictate desire and nostalgia.
- You could not look at early Warhol (Marilyn-as-virgin, in full
- drag-queeny apotheosis on a gold ground; Golgotha, envisioned
- in repeated views of an execution chamber with its electric
- chair and its sign enjoining SILENCE) without sensing that the
- pressures behind such images of abased sanctity came from a
- Byzantine Catholic boyhood.
- </p>
- <p> But this intensity began to leak out of his work after the
- shooting, and by the end of the '70s it was gone. His energy
- last flickered in the hieratic images of Mao Tsetung (1973) and
- perhaps in the 1976 paintings of hammers and sickles. The rest
- was mostly social portraiture, liquor endorsements and bathetic
- collaborations with junior burnouts like Jean-Michel Basquiat,
- along with one single-theme edition of prints after another.
- But even in decline, Warhol remained indicative.
- </p>
- <p> In a sense, Warhol was to the art world what his buddy of the
- discos, Roy Cohn, was to law. Just as Cohn degraded the image
- of the legal profession while leaving no doubt about his own
- forensic brilliance, so Warhol released toxins of careerism,
- facetiousness and celebrity worship into the stream of American
- culture. He was the last artist whose cynicism could still
- perplex the art world, which may explain why--even after he said
- that art was just another job--people continued to scan his
- latest efforts for signs of "subversive" credentials. In fact,
- his work was no more subversive than a catering service, and as
- such it fit the age of Reagan nicely. But the Warhol who will
- survive, the artist of authentic inspiration, died when he was
- shot 19 years ago, not last week. And that artist, in his
- tragic concision and awful openness, will haunt us for some time
- yet.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Robert Hughes
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-