拍品 143
  • 143

ANDY WARHOL | Society Portrait of Susie (Lavender)

估價
300,000 - 400,000 GBP
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描述

  • 安迪·沃荷
  • Society Portrait of Susie (Lavender) 
  • signed and dated 81 on the overlap
  • acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas
  • 101.6 by 101.6 cm. 40 by 40 in.

來源

Private Collection, New York
Private Collection, New York
Pace Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner

Condition

Colour: The colours in the catalogue illustration are fairly accurate, although the overall tonality is deeper and richer in the original. Condition: This work is in very good condition. Extremely close inspection reveals some minute media accretions and some very faint handling marks in isolated places to all four extreme edges. Further very close inspection reveals some extremely fine tension cracks in intermittent places to the two vertical edges and a minute speck of loss to the extreme lower right hand corner tip. No restoration is apparent when examined under ultra violet light.
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."

拍品資料及來源

Largely unknown apart from her name, the sitter of Society Portrait of Susie (Lavender) stares directly at the viewer, her bright red lips contrasting with her matte white skin and jet black hair set against a solid lavender background. Like all of Andy Warhol’s society portraits, this work stands at 40 by 40 inches forming a perfectly square composition which, when aligned with its counterparts, creates what Warhol termed a ‘Portrait of Society’. From 1963 when the artist executed his first commissioned society portrait of Ethel Scull, wife of the New York taxi tycoon and Pop Art collector Robert Scull, Warhol used these works as a way of funding his ambitious production company. At upwards of $25,000 per commission, these works were a necessary source of income to sustain The Factory’s less lucrative projects, particularly after 1971 when the number of orders dramatically increased. Though seen as a purely commercial enterprise which he treated like a job rather than an art, these society portraits effortlessly played off of Warhol’s fascination with celebrity. Since childhood, Warhol had always had a fascination with celebrity and maintained a collection of autographs. Upon his move to New York in 1949, the art editor of Glamour fashion magazine, Tina Fredericks, purchased one of his drawings which led to the commission of a series of shoe illustrations. Shortly afterward, Warhol’s talents were in high demand and featured in magazines such as Vogue, The New York Times and Harper’s Bazaar. Through his ties with the fashion industry, Warhol was in close contact with New York’s rich and famous. His celerity portraits took off in 1962 when Warhol commemorated the death of Marilyn Monroe by creating a series of portraits of her likeness. Many critics have observed how Warhol’s artistic process mirrors the nature of celebrity itself where icons become commodities to be bought and sold.

To create his portraits, Warhol employed a semi-mechanised silk-screening process that allowed him to mass-produce his images. Beginning with a camera, Warhol would take rolls upon rolls of pictures of his subjects using a Polaroid camera. Often referring to his camera as his ‘pencil and paper’, Warhol used it as a filter with which to mediate his interaction with the world. Warhol was keenly aware of the potential of photography to shape meaning and to both reflect and reaffirm the wider cultural obsessions of the American public. Warhol’s captivation with the ephemerality of popular culture, as well as his concern with appearances and representation, make the Polaroid a fitting medium for his portraits. This Polaroid would then be blown up and converted into a negative which Warhol used to trace the sitter’s features onto the canvas from which he would create a silkscreen.

This process results in an idealised interpretation of his subject composed of simplified, colourful shapes. Society Portrait of Susie (Lavender) provides the perfect example: with her barely-there nose and lack of tonal variation in her flesh, Susie Solomon is reduced to her most basic elements while still maintaining her likeness. Warhol was recorded as saying: "I'll paint anybody. Anybody that asks me. I just try to make people look good" (Andy Warhol cited in: Jonathan Jones, ‘The Polaroid Production Line’, The Guardian, October 2008, online). Warhol understood the superficial nature of celebrity in American society; the mask created by marketing companies to commodify public figures that reveal little to nothing about the actual person behind it. Through Warhol’s mechanised and minimalizing silkscreen process, “everyone was a star, not only for fifteen minutes, but, in this incarnation caught permanently on canvas, ‘forever’” (Henry Geldzahler, 'Andy Warhol: Virginal Voyeur', in: Exh Cat., Sydney, Museum of Contemporary Art, Andy Warhol: Portraits, 1993, p. 26).

Modestly referring to himself as ‘just a travelling society painter’, Warhol’s innovative reinterpretation of portraiture is now hailed as having revived a dead art form. In this way, Society Portrait of Susie (Lavender) locates itself at the intersection of tradition and popular culture, thereby representing not only a critical moment in Pop Art but in art history writ large.