BALTIMORE, MD.- The Baltimore Museum of Art presents the first U.S. museum exhibition to explore the late works of the iconic American artist Andy Warhol (1928-1987). More than 50 works reveal the Pop artists energetic return to painting and renewed spirit of experimentation from 1976-1986, while in the midst of his celebrity. This period shows Warhol creating more paintings and on a vastly larger scale than at any other moment of his 40-year career. Exhibition highlights include psychologically revealing fright wig self-portraits, three variations on Leonardo da Vincis The Last Supper, and collaborations with younger artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat. Several of these worksassembled from national and international public and private collections, as well as the BMAs exceptional collection of late works by Warholwere not exhibited until after the artists death.
More than a decade after declaring Painting is old-fashioned, Warhol returned to the medium in the late 1970s as an internationally renowned artist famous for his experimental films as well as his silkscreened Pop art images of soup cans and celebrities. His artistic development during this time is characterized by a dramatic transformation of his style and the introduction of new techniques. He both incorporates and pushes beyond his screen-printed Pop images, and reengages in the physical act of art making through hand painting, folding, and staining. Warhol was also engaged in a dialogue between abstraction and representation beginning with the Oxidation series (1977-78) and silkscreened Shadows (1978-79). In the 1980s he collaborated with Basquiat and Francesco Clemente, mixing graffiti and street imagery with his own Pop vocabulary. A new studio building, purchased in 1984, enabled him to pursue monumental proportions, creating works like The Last Supper that stretch from 25 to 35 feet in width, immersing viewers in dramatic fields of color.
Among the many works Warhol created in series are the Yarn paintings (1983) that evoke Jackson Pollocks drip works, enormous Rorschach paintings (1984), a group of Pop-influenced Black & White Ads (1985-86), and several variations of Camouflage patterns (1986). He revisits his own image throughout the decade with Self-Portraits ranging from the youthful outlined figure repeated on wallpaper (1978) to the severely aged fright-wig representations (1986). As Warhol probed the place of painting in a culture awash with photographic and commercial imagery, his work continued to ask viewers to contemplate celebrity (including his own), glamour, and death in the contemporary era.
Warhol Lounge
The exhibition concludes with a special lounge area that offers a fascinating look at American culture during the late 70s and early 80s. Explore the international and personal events that informed American culture and Warhols art through an interactive timeline. Watch episodes of Warhols MTV show 15 Minutes, and flip through copies of Interview magazine, co-founded by the artist. Spot celebrities in a photomontage of Warhols Polaroids, and slip on a pair of headphones to hear music that defined a generation.