Portraits by Andy Warhol
Portraits by Andy Warhol
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Artwork Information
Signed, Unnumbered
Joseph Beuys F.S. II 243, State II Size 40 x 32 Inches
Joseph Beuy Size 40 x 32 Inches
Grace Kelly Size 40×32 Inches
Kimiko Powers Size 36 x 36 Inches
Liz Taylor Size 23 x 23 Inches
Description
Warhol’s portrait Series features Kimiko Powers, an art collector. Popularized in international art circles in the 1960s, Kimiko and her husband, John, amassed one of the most comprehensive private collection of pop art. This perhaps led to her friendship with famous artists such as Andy Warhol. This was also around the time in the 1970s when Warhol began to regularly accept commissions to paint portraits of the rich and famous because he thought that everyone deserved their “15 minutes.” This portrait captures Kimiko wearing a traditional Japanese dress, glancing at the observer, suggestively Warhol, in an intimate manner. It captures the often unexamined bond between the artist and the collector.
Printmaking, and in particular screenprint, was the basic medium for Andy Warhol’s celebrated work on canvas and paper. While a prize-winning commercial artist in the 1950s, he devised a printing process of blotting outline drawings in ink from one surface to another. In a whimsical book of fashionable shoe styles, done at the time he was head of advertising at a shoe company, his blotted drawings were reproduced and then hand-colored by a team of friends.




