Andy Warhol United States, 1928-1987
40 x 40 in
The portrait held a prominent place in their stunning Fifth Avenue apartment overlooking the Metropolitan Museum. It greeted distinguished guests from various fields—music, art, theater, politics—upon entering. The portrait, with its raised eyebrows suggesting aloofness and calm self-assurance, and a classic pose with hand under chin reminiscent of Warhol’s 1967 self-portrait, perfectly captures the personality of a man who rose from humble beginnings to fame in the art world, much like Warhol himself. Warhol was so pleased with the image he created for this portrait that he used it to develop a new style of portraiture in which he randomly combined patches of color. Unbeknownst to Weintraub, Warhol secretly made a second version of the portrait for himself, which was sold by the Warhol Foundation at auction in 2012. A similar pose and sartorial elegance are found in Warhol’s portrait of Giorgio Armani.
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Andy Warhol, born in Pittsburgh in 1928, became the leading figure of Pop Art by merging avant-garde aesthetics with commercial culture. After graduating in pictorial design from the Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1949, he moved to New York and became one of the most sought-after commercial illustrators of the 1950s. In the 1960s, he shifted to painting and revolutionized the art world with works like the Campbell's Soup Cans series and the Marilyn Diptych, using silkscreen techniques to explore the intersection of consumerism, celebrity, and artistic expression. Warhol’s silkscreens, sculptures replicating supermarket products, and experimental films like Empire and The Chelsea Girls pushed the boundaries of contemporary art by questioning the nature of fame, media, and mass production.
Warhol’s fascination with celebrity culture and materialism earned him a global reputation and countless commissions from socialites and stars. His work, which both critiqued and embraced the commodification of culture, has influenced generations of artists by blurring the lines between high art and popular culture. His provocative statement that “in the future, everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes” reflects his deep understanding of media’s role in shaping public perception. Decades after his death in 1987, Warhol remains a towering figure in contemporary art, with his works housed in major museums worldwide, including MoMA, the Whitney Museum, the Centre Pompidou, and Tate Modern.
Provenance
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob and Bronka Weintraub, New York, NY (acquired directly from the artist in 1986)Private Collection, New York, NY
Sotheby's, New York, Wednesday, May 14, 2003: lot 259
Nicholas Sands & Co. Fine Art, New York (acquired from the above sale)
Private Collection, New York, NY
Private Collection, Belgium
Exhibitions
Warhol. The American Dream Factory, October 20, 2020 - April 18, 2021, La Boverie, Liège, BelgiumLiterature
Tony Shafrazi et. al., Andy Warhol Portraits, London, 2007, pp. 286 and 309, illustratedJacob Weintraub, Jacob’s Ladder: From the Bottom of the Warsaw Ghetto to the Top of New York’s Art World, An Autobiography, London, 1994, illustrated on the cover