VOICE ONE:
I’m Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Barbara Klein with People in America in VOA Special English. Today we
tell about Andy Warhol, one of the most influential people in American modern
art. Warhol was best known for his bright colored images of famous people and
food cans. Through both his art and lifestyle he explored the nature of fame,
popular culture, and the media. His artistic influence and unusual personality
redefined the modern art world.
VOICE ONE:
Andy Warhol was not always famous around the world. He was born in 1928 in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His parents were immigrants from Czechoslovakia. Their
last name was Warhola, which Andy later shortened to Warhol. As a child, Andy
spent a great deal of time sick in bed. While he was recovering, he would draw
pictures. When his father died, he left enough money for Andy to attend art
school.
Andy Warhol attended the Carnegie Institute of Technology where he studied
pictorial design. Pictorial design is the art of creating images and drawings.
Often these drawings are used in the production of advertisements and magazines.
VOICE TWO:
In 1949 Warhol moved to New York City to work as a commercial artist. He drew
pictures for magazines and advertisements. He became very successful. During the
nineteen fifties Warhol drew images for many important magazines such as Vogue
and Harper's Bazaar.He also became very well known for a series of ads he made
for shoes. Warhol used his experience in commercial art as an entry into fine
art. He began his painting career as part of the Pop Art movement. This movement
was at its strongest during the 1960s.
VOICE ONE:
Pop Art was defined by images of material goods and popular culture. Pop
artists rejected the serious nature of the art world. To do this, these artists
painted or printed everyday images of things that usually are not considered
art. These images included photographs from magazines, drink advertisements and
drawings from popular comic strips.
VOICE TWO:
Some critics say that Pop Art was a reaction to Abstract Expressionism.
Artists of the Abstract Expressionist movement took themselves very seriously.
They did not approve of popular culture. They thought artists should not be
concerned with such unimportant parts of culture. Pop artists, however,
celebrated popular culture in all of its forms. They approved of using mass
media and mass production as an influence in their art. Pop Art also reflected
the rise in wealth and the importance of owning things that America experienced
in the 1950s. One art critic defined Pop art as popular, low-cost, young,
mass-produced and sexy.
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VOICE ONE:
One of Warhol's first exhibits was in 1962. He created thirty-two paintings
of red and white soup cans. These paintings shook the art world. The soup cans
looked like the soup produced by one of America’s most popular food companies,
Campbell’s. Every painting looked the same except for the words written on the
can that described the different kinds of soup.
Warhol used a very smooth painting method so the artwork almost did not look
hand-made. The paintings looked like they came out of the same factory that made
the soup cans. No one had ever seen art like this. Warhol also made paintings
using images such as Coca Cola bottles, dollar symbols, and popular cleaning
products. He took the most everyday objects and turned them into fine art.
VOICE TWO:
Warhol soon started making silk-screen prints. This method of reproduction
permitted the artist to make many images very quickly. He would often repeat the
same picture many times in one artwork. He liked the idea of mass produced art.
He once said that he thought everyone should think alike and be like a machine.
In fact, the place where he created his art was called The Factory. He had many
assistants who helped him produce his art.
VOICE ONE:
Warhol explored many other subjects. For example, he made a series of
paintings on death and disaster. These works showed images of car accidents and
executions. He also made pictures of famous people such as the actress Marilyn
Monroe and the singer Elvis Presley. Warhol was very interested in fame. He
celebrated famous people and they celebrated him.
VOICE TWO:
Andy Warhol once said something about fame that became very popular and is
still repeated today. He said that in the future, everybody will be famous for
fifteen minutes. Warhol certainly enjoyed being well known. He created a very
unusual public personality. He would wear strange wigs on his head made of white
hair. He would go out every night to parties and other social gatherings where
there were beautiful and important people. He would talk to reporters in a very
shy manner. Often he would provide unclear answers to their questions. Here is a
recording of Andy Warhol being asked about his art. It is from a nineteen
ninety-one documentary film about Warhol’s life.
VOICE ONE:
Andy Warhol was much more than just a painter. He was also a film maker,
publisher, and manager of a rock band. For example, he produced several low
budget art films in the early nineteen sixties. One was called “Empire? It
showed a filmed image of the Empire State Building in New York City. The film
was eight hours long. In the movie "Sleep", Warhol recorded a friend sleeping.
The film lasts six hours. When asked about the uneventful nature of these films,
Warhol answered that he liked boring or uninteresting things.
VOICE TWO:
In the middle 1960s, Warhol also managed a rock band called The Velvet
Underground. He helped produce one of their records and designed the cover of
the album.
Another of Warhol's projects was the creation of "Interview"magazine. This
magazine covered many kinds of American popular culture. Andy Warhol was able to
interview the kinds of people he liked best, famous people. A colorful drawing
of a famous person was on the cover of every issue of the magazine. The image
was drawn in the style of Warhol’s paintings.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
In 1968, Andy Warhol was shot by a woman who had been in one of his films.
Valerie Solanas was angry with Warhol for not making a movie based on a play she
wrote. The bullet from the gun hit several of Warhol's organs and almost killed
him. The media's reaction to this event made him even more famous.
VOICE TWO:
Even though he worked on many other projects, Andy Warhol always kept
producing artwork. In the nineteen seventies he made millions of dollars
painting people’s portraits. Wealthy people all over the world paid a great deal
of money to have him paint their picture. In the 1980s, Warhol worked with
several younger artists. They included Jean Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring.
Warhol also wrote several books and created two cable television programs.
VOICE ONE:
Warhol’s art would have surely continued in many new directions. But he died
as a result of problems after a minor operation in nineteen eighty-seven. He was
fifty-eight years old. At his death, Warhol's total estimated worth was more
than one hundred million dollars. Most of this money helped create the Andy
Warhol Foundation which helps support the visual arts.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
In 1994, the Andy Warhol Museum opened in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This
museum is in a large industrial building. As you walk up the seven floors of the
museum, you can see more than five hundred works of art by Warhol. The museum
has pieces from every period of his career.
VOICE ONE:
On the fifth floor there is a special exhibit called Silver Clouds. This room
is based on an art gallery show that Warhol designed in 1966. The room is filled
with many silver colored balloons that are square shaped. The balloons contain
helium and oxygen so that they float around with the air currents. Warhol's idea
was to create a joyful and magical room in which the artwork moved around the
visitors.
VOICE TWO:
Andy Warhol helped change the way the world defined modern art. His colorful
Pop Art images and unusual personality made him one of the most famous and
important people in American art and culture.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
This program was written and produced by Dana Demange. I'm Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Barbara Klein. Join us again next week for PEOPLE IN AMERICA in VOA
Special English.