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About Face: Andy Warhol Portraits (Essays)
 
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About Face: Andy Warhol Portraits (Essays) [Paperback]

Nicholas Baume (Editor), Peter C. Sutton (Foreword)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

Essays October 29, 1999
The most widely admired paintings by Andy Warhol—and the most reviled—are his portraits. About Face, which accompanies an exhibition organized by the Wadsworth Atheneum, presents the first overview of Warhol's portraiture to embrace all periods and media. "About face" refers both to Warhol's fascination with images of the human face and to his characteristic method of reversal. For example, Warhol reverses the portraitist's goal to capture the essence of a subject's individuality in his factory production of "Warhol portraits." His portraits are about the creation of faces (as the public masks onto which identity is projected) rather than the revealing of a "true" self. Warhol's portraits, which reveal the artificial aspects of public identity, initiate a "democracy" of fame and beauty, where everyone has superstar potential.

Nicholas Baume's essay shows how Warhol's career-long interest in the representation of people, including himself, marks a radical departure from the humanist portrait tradition. In his essay on the pre-Pop shoe collages and male portraits, Richard Meyer looks at Warhol's complex and camp rethinking of gender, sexuality, and portraiture throughout the 1950s. Douglas Crimp focuses on Warhol's portrait-related film Blow Job, offering an alternative to the accepted interpretation of the underground classic as voyeuristic.

The book contains a number of images published for the first time, including newly made stills from films of the 1960s and videos of the 1980s.

Copublished with The Wadsworth Atheneum.

EXHIBITION SCHEDULE:

Wadsworth Atheneum
Hartford, Connecticut
September 23, 1999-January 30, 2000

Miami Art Museum
Miami, Florida
March 24-June 4, 2000

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In the early 1950s he sketched them. In the '60s he filmed them. And during the '70s and '80s he primarily silk-screened them. But whatever the medium, faces were a dominant theme of Andy Warhol's work throughout his career. And though his portrait work was as often decried by art critics as it was praised by viewers, he never wavered in his interest. About Face: Andy Warhol Portraits is, as the title suggests, a narrowly focused book that explores this favorite subject. Among the book's 75 or so plates, images of Jackie, Marilyn, and Mao join portraits of subjects who need last names to be identified and of Warhol himself. Readers will notice that all of the images--movie stills of Edie Sedgwick and Lou Reed, Polaroids of Warhol in drag, early Interview magazine covers--are unmistakably the work of the same artist. Warhol's choice of wide-ranging portrait subjects, from famous pop-culture figures to anonymous friends and faces drawn from his imagination, allowed him to explore issues of identity, celebrity, and even portraiture itself. With its lovely plates and scholarly essays, this slim but expertly produced book--published to coincide with an exhibition at Hartford's Wadsworth Atheneum in the fall of 1999 and the Miami Art Museum in spring 2000--would make a worthy addition to the library of any Warhol fan. --Jordana Moskowitz

From Booklist

Throughout a career that continues to be controversial, Andy Warhol made portraits: economically drawn facial outlines and gold-foil inlaid drawings of shoes that ostensibly represent celebrities in the '50s; silk-screened celebrity photos and extended motion-picture head shots in the '60s; and more silk-screened photos, this time altered by abstract applications of color, in the '70s and '80s. About two thirds of this handsome book, keyed to an exhibition that won't travel a lot, displays the range of Warhol's portraiture very handsomely, and three critical essays add considerable value. Nicholas Bauer discusses Warhol's work as a critical deviation from conventional portraiture; Richard Meyer considers the '50s pictures as expressions of homosexual camp; and Douglas Crimp homes in on what is shown and what is not in Warhol's portrait films as well as on the often presumptuous assumptions that previous critics have made about the films. There are probably too many Warhol books, but one more good one is always welcome. This is a good one. Ray Olson

Product Details

  • Paperback: 128 pages
  • Publisher: The Wadsworth Atheneum/The Andy Warhol Museum/MIT Press (October 29, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262522721
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262522724
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,970,373 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Andy Warhol, a painter and graphic artist, also produced a significant body of film work, including his famous Chelsea Girls. He was equally well known in the late sixties and early seventies as resident host at his studio, The Factory, where one could listen to Lou Reed and the Velvet Underground and rub elbows with Edie Sedgwick. Warhold died in New York in 1987.

 

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars through, August 22, 2000
This review is from: About Face: Andy Warhol Portraits (Essays) (Paperback)
walking through his colourful style in all portraits the reality is swept away and the eccentric personas survive
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