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Monday, October 7, 2024 |
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Andy Warhol: Other Voices, Other Rooms Opens at The Hayward Gallery in London |
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Bibbe Hansen, who appeared in the Andy Warhol films 'Prison' and 'Restaurant', observes part of the works of art made by the artist on view at the Hayward Gallery in London. Photo: EFE / Andy Rain.
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LONDON.- No artist living in the second half of the 20th century has made a deeper impression on popular culture than Andy Warhol (1928-1987). 40 years on from Warhols first major exhibition in Europe, and his infamous shooting by Valerie Solanas, The Hayward presents a major exhibition that brings a fresh perspective to his work Andy Warhol: Other Voices, Other Rooms, 7 October 2008 18 January 2009.
Visitors will be immersed in Warhols way of thinking and working through the exciting multi-media installation which will transform the gallery. Paintings and prints of famous icons including Marilyn Monroe and Campbells soup tins, will be shown alongside video, TV programmes, films, Polaroid photos, delicate drawings, album covers and wallpaper patterns. This vivid presentation reflects Warhols egalitarian maxim, all is pretty; with all media presented on the same level.
Andy Warhol was fascinated with film and television and the exhibition explores the relationship between the moving image and the still image in his work. It brings together films, screen tests, videos, and TV programmes, which combined with extraordinary archive material, seminal paintings and installations, illuminates his creative process, sheds new light on his work and explores his genius for discerning the way pop culture penetrates our lives.
Highlights of the exhibition include:
Iconic Pop Art works including screen prints of Marilyn Monroe, Campbell Soup Tins, Flowers and Electric Chairs.
19 of Warhols films, including Sleep (1963), Empire (1964), Poor Little Rich Girl (1965), and Chelsea Girls (1966) presented together simultaneously in a unique installation. A further eight films will be shown in a separate screening room.
Screen tests of artists, writers and musicians such as Allen Ginsberg, Marcel Duchamp, John Cale and Salvador Dali.
Factory Diaries video diaries showing the inner workings of the Factory capturing regulars and celebrities such as David Bowie and Liza Minnelli, as well as Warhols creative process.
All 42 episodes from his 1980s cable TV serials, Fashion; Andy Warhols TV; and Andy Warhols Fifteen Minutes; in which he appeared with friends such as Debbie Harry and Jerry Hall. These have never been shown together before and will be screened synchronously in a unique installation.
The entire contents of Time Capsule 92 featuring a treasure-trove of ephemera collected by Warhol, including letters, invitations, receipts, newspaper cuttings and photographs of The Beatles, Dennis Hopper and Jackie Kennedy.
A room filled with Warhols helium inflated pillow-shaped Silver Clouds
Almost two decades on from The Haywards acclaimed exhibition Andy Warhol: A Retrospective (1989), the gallery presents a new take on Warhols work. Using the moving image as its starting point to explore Warhols core concerns voyeurism, celebrity, the mundane, and the blurring of distinctions between high and low culture, the exhibition illustrates his prophetic insight into todays media-obsessed society.
The exhibition installation will be divided into three sections: Filmscape a cinematic landscape showing 19 films; TV-Scape showing simultaneously all 42 episodes from the three TV series Warhol created between 1979 and 1987; and Cosmos providing insight into Warhols character and work, with paintings, drawings, photographs, audio listening booths, a Brillo Box, album covers, Interview magazines, artists books and Time Capsule 92.
Curated by independent curator, Eva Meyer-Hermann, and housed in an extraordinary setting by the Berlin designers, chezweitz & roseapple, the exhibition is organised by the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, and The Andy Warhol Museum, one of the four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh. Stephanie Rosenthal, Chief Curator at The Hayward, has collaborated on this presentation of the exhibition. The exhibition began its tour at the Stedelijk Museum last October where it attracted record visitors and was then shown at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm, where Warhol held his first European exhibition in 1968.
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