Andy Warhol's Mick Jagger

Mar 14th, 2011

Andy Warhol's Mick Jagger

Andy Warhol Mick Jagger

 

Andy Warhol's Mick Jagger (1975) is a silk-screen portrait of the Rolling Stones musician that was made in many versions. It is one of the series of silk-screens that he made on the subject of fame. They began in the early 1960s with his many portraits of Marilyn Monroe whose sad death in 1962 led him to contemplation of what it meant to be famous and what it could possibly be worth. The fame of the individuals in these portraits was usually of the Hollywood variety and various representations of Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, Elvis Presley, and others are among the best known. Usually the different versions employed the same image--sometimes repeatedly within the same piece. In every instance, however, Warhol's method was to use appropriated images. They were usually taken from the press or from Hollywood promotional materials and adapted for the artist's purposes.

 

Andy Warhol Mick Jagger

 

In these paintings Warhol also made many points about applying mechanized methods of reproduction to "fine arts," thereby turning fine art into consumer goods. And, by implication, the people in the 'fame' portraits were, in a sense, consumer goods themselves. He called his studio "The Factory" and he and his assistants turned out as many as 80 silk-screens per day. Despite all this emphasis on mechanical reproduction, however, he always preferred the signs of the human touch in the work.

 

Andy Warhol Mick Jagger


Please contact the gallery for further information and availability. Appointments are available 7 days a week for private viewing and discussing your collecting needs.

 

 

Guy Hepner

300 N Robertson Blvd.

West Hollywood CA, 90048

info@guyhepner.com

Tel: +1 310.979.0011

www.guyhepner.com

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