Thursday, November 28, 2019
Andy Warhol Essays - The Velvet Underground, Pop Art, Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol Essays - The Velvet Underground, Pop Art, Andy Warhol    Andy Warhol      ever before have I encountered more intriguing works of art than those   done by Andy Warhol. I have been curious about his life ever since I saw   his work in Milwaukee. I saw his famous work of the Campbell's Soup Can.   By viewing this, one can tell he is not your average artist. I'm sure his   life is full of interesting events that shaped him into who he was. As an   artist myself, I would like to get to know the background of his life. I   may then be able to appreciate his styles and understand why and how his   works were created. His life is as interesting as his artistic   masterpieces.   Andrew Warhola (his original name) was born one of three sons of Czech   immigrants, somewhere in Pennsylvania on either August 6, 1928 or on   September 28, 1930 (the date on his birth certificate). His father died   when Andy was at a very young age. Thus, it forced Andy into a deep   depression containing lack of self confidence. Much of his young life has   been kept secret. However, he did report being very shy and depressed   because he never felt comfortable with his homosexuality. His childhood   life may have been full of the torture that children threw at him for   being the different person he was. He was able to attend college. After   graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in pictorial design from   Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1949, he went to New York City with   Philip Pearlstein, who was a fellow student that later became a well-known   realist painter. In 1960, Warhol finally began to paint in earnest and to   view art seriously as a career. He began his career with commercial   drawings of women's shoes. In 1961, an early manifestation was his Dick   Tracy, an enlarged version of the comic strip that was placed in the   window of Lord & Taylor's department store. He followed in his own   footsteps to keep going in the ever-so-famous pop art track. Warhol's   use of images are so close to the images themselves, thanks to the   photographic silkscreen technique, which is a process of applying the same   image over and over again without changing the original. In 1963, he began   turning film into his next aesthetic. He was the recorder of the world   around him. Warhol saw this world as populated by hustlers of various   sorts, motivated largely by money and the goods it would buy. Later that   next year, he started to experiment in underground film. In the late 70's   he began to use sex and nudity to gain attention in his films. Whether   this was moral or not; it did, however, work. The rest of his short life   was spent visiting with celebrities and keeping up with the world's times.   He tried to understand how the rest of the world saw things, but just   never got there. Sadly, Warhol died of a heart failure on March 9, 1987,   still wearing his famous blond hair wig.   Andy's diaries are not actual written records of his day to day accounts,   but they are audio recordings of his phone conversations to Pat Hackett   every Monday through Friday (from Wednesday, November 24, 1976 to Tuesday,   February 17, 1987, just weeks before his death). Warhol originally   intended these daily records to be documentation of his minor business   expenses. He was just audited and felt the need to be extra careful. In a   word it was a diary. But whatever its broader objective, its narrow one,   to satisfy tax auditors, was always on my mind (Warhol xvi). Later on, he   felt the diaries were a great way to explain his everyday occurrences for   more than a decade of his life. This view of his life from his eyes is   probably the most balanced view ever given. He may have changed since the   60's, but it is still the truest representation of Andy, himself. He never   expressed the key happenings of his life; it's as if we, the readers,   already knew them. He just usually mentions the quick everyday type things   such as a cab ride to uptown New York.  The first major influence on Andy Warhol's life was the stepping stone of   his artistic career,    
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