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Auction archive: Lot number 14

Andy Warhol

Warhol in China
28 May 2017
Estimate
HK$120,000 - HK$180,000
ca. US$15,409 - US$23,114
Price realised:
HK$275,000
ca. US$35,313
Auction archive: Lot number 14

Andy Warhol

Warhol in China
28 May 2017
Estimate
HK$120,000 - HK$180,000
ca. US$15,409 - US$23,114
Price realised:
HK$275,000
ca. US$35,313
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Andy Warhol 《安迪·沃荷》 1982 Blindstamp credit in the margin. Initialled ‘T.J.H.’ by Timothy J. Hunt of the Andy Warhol Foundation in pencil, estate copyright credit reproduction limitation and date stamps on the verso. Gelatin silver print Image: 20.3 x 25.4 cm. (7 7/8 x 10 in.) Accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity signed in ink by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Provenance The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Literature Nicholas Chambers, Michael Frahm and Tony Godfrey, eds., Warhol in China, Germany, 2014, p. 307 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay “Gee it’s big.” “It’s more impressive than I could have imagined.”Andy Warhol, quoted in Christopher Makos Andy Warhol China 1982, China, 2007, p. 63, 66. Andy Warhol’s first unfettered encounter with the image of Chairman Mao came exactly 10 years after he began experimenting with sequences of Mao portraits in 1972. Arriving in Tiananmen Square in 1982, Warhol saw, firsthand, Mao’s portrait—his first real and proper impression of the Chairman aside from the one he lifted from Mao’s Little Red Book. “I love his book. I read it all the time. I like the simple thoughts.” Andy Warhol quoted in Christopher Makos Andy Warhol China 1982, China, 2007, p. 63. Posing with Christopher Makos outside the Forbidden City for a photograph, Mao’s face hangs behind Warhol, blurry but still presiding. “Andy actually thought the real Mao portrait was better than his, and really loved the original,” says Makos. Filled with ironic confidence, Warhol’s various comments upon coming face-to-face with the subject of his multitudinous works shaped the present collection’s photographs. Set against seas of men and women in their blue Mao suits, the Chairman’s notions of simplicity, uniformity, and conformity are at the heart of Warhol’s almost indistinguishable snapshots of myriad cultural landmarks: the Forbidden City, the Temple of Heaven, the Temple of Azure Clouds, Beihai Park, the Summer Palace, and the Fragrant Hill Hotel designed by I.M. Pei. Transformed into the nebulous and nondescript locales, the present works are at times paired with equally inconspicuous titles, and all works are given equal treatment no matter their original fame or inherent importance. In this light, the present collection becomes an in-depth interplay of origin versus appropriation and transformation. From his large canvases of Marilyn Monroes to his repeated dollar bills, repetition to Warhol was the means through which to describe the notion of mass production in society. He was attracted to the Chinese text on signs and billboards during his trip for their foreign and abstract forms, such as can be seen in Chinese Characters (Lot 3) and in other works he had created. Perhaps it was this very curiosity in Chinese culture that perpetuated him to respond to what he was seeing by internalising and then externalising his impressions. Stretching his arms out wide, opening up his chest and lengthening his back, as seen in Lot 14, Warhol was in fact mimicking the people he saw outside of his hotel window doing ‘taichi’, a common and well-loved activity of the Chinese everyday life. From the numerous Chinese characters on billboards (Lots 12, 13, 15, 17, 23) to mass produced bicycles, buses, and cars (Lots 15, 16, 18) to rubbish bins, (Lot 2) to the very first department store established in China (Lots 7, 17), Warhol not only captured the moment of the rising consumerist culture through his camera lens, but the way he compressed every snippet of his short four day excursion into a patchwork of repetitive shots suggests that his experience of being in China was mass-produced in itself. Like his Campbell’s soup cans, Coca-Cola bottles and Brillo soap pad boxes, Warhol’s fascination in ideas of abundance, the rise in consumerism, and the cult of celebrity culture is what truly shines through in the present body of photographs from China, be it of Mao, of its people, or of its monuments. Read More Artist Bio Andy Warhol American • 1928 - 1987 A seminal figure in the Pop Art movement of the early 1960s, Andy Warhol's paintings and screenprints are iconic beyond the scope of Art History, having become universal signifiers of an age. An early career in commercial illustration led to Warhol's appropriation of imagery from American

Auction archive: Lot number 14
Auction:
Datum:
28 May 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
Hong Kong
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Andy Warhol 《安迪·沃荷》 1982 Blindstamp credit in the margin. Initialled ‘T.J.H.’ by Timothy J. Hunt of the Andy Warhol Foundation in pencil, estate copyright credit reproduction limitation and date stamps on the verso. Gelatin silver print Image: 20.3 x 25.4 cm. (7 7/8 x 10 in.) Accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity signed in ink by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Provenance The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Literature Nicholas Chambers, Michael Frahm and Tony Godfrey, eds., Warhol in China, Germany, 2014, p. 307 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay “Gee it’s big.” “It’s more impressive than I could have imagined.”Andy Warhol, quoted in Christopher Makos Andy Warhol China 1982, China, 2007, p. 63, 66. Andy Warhol’s first unfettered encounter with the image of Chairman Mao came exactly 10 years after he began experimenting with sequences of Mao portraits in 1972. Arriving in Tiananmen Square in 1982, Warhol saw, firsthand, Mao’s portrait—his first real and proper impression of the Chairman aside from the one he lifted from Mao’s Little Red Book. “I love his book. I read it all the time. I like the simple thoughts.” Andy Warhol quoted in Christopher Makos Andy Warhol China 1982, China, 2007, p. 63. Posing with Christopher Makos outside the Forbidden City for a photograph, Mao’s face hangs behind Warhol, blurry but still presiding. “Andy actually thought the real Mao portrait was better than his, and really loved the original,” says Makos. Filled with ironic confidence, Warhol’s various comments upon coming face-to-face with the subject of his multitudinous works shaped the present collection’s photographs. Set against seas of men and women in their blue Mao suits, the Chairman’s notions of simplicity, uniformity, and conformity are at the heart of Warhol’s almost indistinguishable snapshots of myriad cultural landmarks: the Forbidden City, the Temple of Heaven, the Temple of Azure Clouds, Beihai Park, the Summer Palace, and the Fragrant Hill Hotel designed by I.M. Pei. Transformed into the nebulous and nondescript locales, the present works are at times paired with equally inconspicuous titles, and all works are given equal treatment no matter their original fame or inherent importance. In this light, the present collection becomes an in-depth interplay of origin versus appropriation and transformation. From his large canvases of Marilyn Monroes to his repeated dollar bills, repetition to Warhol was the means through which to describe the notion of mass production in society. He was attracted to the Chinese text on signs and billboards during his trip for their foreign and abstract forms, such as can be seen in Chinese Characters (Lot 3) and in other works he had created. Perhaps it was this very curiosity in Chinese culture that perpetuated him to respond to what he was seeing by internalising and then externalising his impressions. Stretching his arms out wide, opening up his chest and lengthening his back, as seen in Lot 14, Warhol was in fact mimicking the people he saw outside of his hotel window doing ‘taichi’, a common and well-loved activity of the Chinese everyday life. From the numerous Chinese characters on billboards (Lots 12, 13, 15, 17, 23) to mass produced bicycles, buses, and cars (Lots 15, 16, 18) to rubbish bins, (Lot 2) to the very first department store established in China (Lots 7, 17), Warhol not only captured the moment of the rising consumerist culture through his camera lens, but the way he compressed every snippet of his short four day excursion into a patchwork of repetitive shots suggests that his experience of being in China was mass-produced in itself. Like his Campbell’s soup cans, Coca-Cola bottles and Brillo soap pad boxes, Warhol’s fascination in ideas of abundance, the rise in consumerism, and the cult of celebrity culture is what truly shines through in the present body of photographs from China, be it of Mao, of its people, or of its monuments. Read More Artist Bio Andy Warhol American • 1928 - 1987 A seminal figure in the Pop Art movement of the early 1960s, Andy Warhol's paintings and screenprints are iconic beyond the scope of Art History, having become universal signifiers of an age. An early career in commercial illustration led to Warhol's appropriation of imagery from American

Auction archive: Lot number 14
Auction:
Datum:
28 May 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
Hong Kong
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