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Snap Shots: by Harry Flashman
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Andy Warhol
I
covered the passing of the legendary Henri Cartier-Bresson in 2004. He was an
artist/photographer remembered for his ability to record the human psyche in all
its depth and complexity.
By comparison, let us look at another artist/photographer who is remembered for
his ability to record the human psyche in all its shallowness (and complexity).
This is Andy Warhol (1928-1987), a complex character himself, and probably even
deeper than Cartier-Bresson.
Andy Warhol was born in Pittsburgh, USA, the son of Czechoslovakian immigrants.
He studied pictorial design and art history, sociology and psychology, and
worked initially as a commercial artist for Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar and the I.
Miller shoe company, where he was paid per shoe he drew. Andy did not mind this,
as he was able to quickly work out how much he was owed!
In 1962 he produced his silkscreen prints on canvas of dollar notes, Campbell’s
Soup tins, and Marilyn Monroe (copies of which can be still seen in any copy
artist’s studio in Thailand). The 32 soup cans were a deliberate attempt by
Warhol to produce ‘legitimate’ art, trying to show that the human mind was
attracted by the ‘sameness’, and it was the continuous exposure to those kind of
images that produced a sense of security in the viewer. It was a conundrum of
producing ‘art’ from something that was almost the antithesis of art.
From there he branched out into photography as well, but rather than take
carefully arranged photographs, Andy Warhol went the other way, using a Polaroid
camera to record ‘instant’ photographs, again in the anti-art genre. There are
no well lit, carefully posed, complementary background photographs from his
Polaroid era. In fact, as he then began to move in the Hi-So circles, Warhol
would go out every night and capture the people on film. “You want to go out
every night because you’re afraid if you stay home you might miss something,”
wrote Warhol many years ago.
He had discovered that the life in America was like his Campbell’s Soup tins.
Everyone wanted to be exposed to the public, the more times the better. The more
recognizable, the more ‘famous’ you had become, and Warhol was the man who would
be there. The ‘ultimate’ street photographer. Just as Cartier-Bresson
photographed the ordinary people, Andy Warhol photographed the out of the
ordinary people. His relentless shots taken in Studio 54, the ‘in place’ disco
are albums of freaks, hangers-on, minor celebrities, aging movie stars, starlets
eager for any publicity, drunks, transvestites, designers, people with designs
on being designers, the whole superfluous and superficial crowd. And Andy got
them all, and in some ways recorded an era for posterity. (Sounds surprisingly
like Pattaya!) This could be thought of as the forerunners of the ubiquitous
‘selfie’ - no longer do you have to wait for the photographer to see you - you
don’t need Andy Warhol!
I think that from originally being a voyeur, Warhol eventually began to believe
his own press and his florid behavior became even more outlandish. He made
movies of incredible length - Sleep, a six hour epic and Empire even two hours
longer. But of course the world was ready for someone like this. The post war
liberalization was breeding people who would symbolize the extremes that the new
freedoms had brought.
Warhol continued with his entourage around him who I believe were needed to keep
his empire going, as Warhol himself was too distracted to be able to keep track
of what was happening. He was having showings and exhibitions all over the
world, and was treating them all and the viewers with artistic contempt, his way
of shielding himself from the world or revealing his true introspective nature.
As the world moved into the 80’s, America changed, and the attitudes changed
with it. There were fewer places for people like Andy Warhol to feel secure in.
Reality was returning after the excesses of the 60’s and 70’s, and the Warhol
star was on the wane.
He died from a post-operative complication in 1987, but left us a record of a
time in history that will never be repeated. As an exercise, go to Amazon and
see how much Warhol’s books are fetching today!
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