One of the exhibits at Salford, Debbie Harry by Andy Warhol
Fellow Hockney researcher and volunteer CM recently visited the 'Warhol and The Diva' exhibition at The Lowry and we asked her to write a review. Many, many thanks to her for this great piece of writing.
Warhol and The Diva at The Lowry (running until 25th Sept)
After walking around rooms of Lowry's mill scenes and seascapes, it's quite a shock to suddenly find myself surrounded by Hollywood glamour. But then Warhol himself, having grown up poor in a mining town, knew only too well the impact of divas such as Judy Garland, Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor in bringing that glamour to the everyday.
On the surface (where Warhol appeared happiest), there is little in this show that's new. Warhol was interested in celebrating the banality of the everyday. What this exhibition does do is explore Warhol's own fascination with the women he made into art. There are startling photos and film footage of him in women's clothes, wig and make-up, appearing to emulate Marilyn Monroe. In a room painted gold and hot pink, filled with Warhol's Marilyns and a chandelier reflecting in the glass, it's a pretty powerful impression.
There are also photographs of Warhol with many of his artistic subjects, such as Elizabeth Taylor and Debbie Harry. What is striking is how comfortable they look in his presence, regarding him as a fellow star, while he retains the awkward pose of the impoverished starstruck kid, always the detached outsider.
Given David Hockney's association with Warhol, I was interested in what common ground their art appears to share. In a New York Times article ('David Hockney's Long road Home') by Carol Kino (October 15, 2009), Chrissie Iles, curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art is quoted as saying "(Hockney) took the very English preoccupation with portraiture and turned it upside down by eroticizing it". Warhol arguably does something similar but in a very American way. There's also the bright colours of Warhol's divas and Hockney's pool paintings, and the fascination with famous, glamorous people in society. But while Hockney developed friendships with many of his subjects, or depicted those he already knew, Warhol always retained a starstruck distance.
One of the most interesting things about this exhibition is how it displays the original Polaroids of many of Warhol's original subjects (although, significantly, he never met Monroe - the ultimate unattainable star), letting you see how his portraits compare. Seeing Liza Minnelli and Debbie Harry in their natural, yet obviously glamorous selves, then as exaggerated colour-saturated works of art was fascinating.
Watching 'This Green and Pleasant Land ', a BBC4 documentary about the history of landscape painting reminded me of David Hockney's fascination with new technology. The programme discussed his use of the iPad in creating art, which he regularly sends to his friends (lucky friends), and whether this is a revolutionary way of making art, or if it threatens to destroy it, by removing the idea of the original. You can only imagine what Warhol himself would also be doing with the technology we have today, if he were still alive.
Post Author CM
'Warhol and The Diva' (until 25 September, The Lowry, Salford Quays:
www.thelowry.com/events/andy-warhol-divas/home/)Below, a wonderful photo of Mr. Hockney and Andy Warhol
David Hockney and Andy Warhol image from a great article below, what do you think of it?
http://www.harpreetkhara.com/archives/4879
http://theportraitparty.blogspot.com/2007/10/andy-warhol-david-hockney.html
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