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Andy Warhol at the Whitney: Why it Matters

If you haven’t seen Andy Warhol at the Whitney Museum yet, make sure you get there before it ends on March 31. You have plenty of time, so no excuses. Andy Warhol–From A to B and Back Again includes over 350 works, and yes, the soup cans are present and accounted for. It is, according to the museum, the “first major reassessment of his work in thirty years.”

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Andy Warhol at the Whitney

I think it’s safe to assume that most people in the world are familiar with Andy’s work. I mean, you’d really have to be living under a rock not to be. Soup cans and coke bottles and portraits of Liz, Marilyn, Liza–icons all, captured by an icon. These images are some of the most recognizable in pop culture. Of course, just because they are universally known, does not mean they are universally loved. I know many people who don’t LOVE Andy Warhol. And, I know some people who actively dislike Andy Warhol. “I mean, it’s just a bunch of Brillo boxes,” was a thing I heard at the exhibit (standing in front of the Brillo boxes). To each his own, especially when it comes to art. Full disclosure: I love the guy. He’s a disruptor. A troublemaker. I love troublemakers.

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Portraits by Andy Warhol at the Whitney

I’m not going to give you a screed on Warhol’s contribution to art and culture. Like the saying goes, I’m no art critic but I know what I like. But whether you love him or hate him, this exhibit is worth seeing. Why? Well for one thing, it’s rare to see this volume of work in one place, spanning so much time. The scale of the exhibit is staggering. It includes everything from his earliest commercial work, Interview magazine, film and television projects, early silk screen experiments, private sketches, and ephemera, to collaborative work with Jean-Michel Basquiat, and a huge collection of commissioned portraits. It’s exhausting to view, just imagine what it must have been like inside his head.

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Mao Tse Tung, Andy Warhol

If you think you know Warhol, seeing the work all together like this will give you a new appreciation. If you dislike Warhol, you may find yourself inspired by the sheer voluminous output. And if you are one of those people who thinks that all he did was reproduce soup can labels, you may find yourself reevaluating your opinion. Photographs of the silkscreened flowers or the gigantic Mao Tse Tung don’t show you how “painterly” these works are. Getting up close to the lovely and delicate shoe portraits is a rare treat. (I COVET the Diana Vreeland shoe drawing.) The line drawings, some never before seen by the public, are touching and intimate.

Andy Warhol at the Whitney
Diana Vreeland’s shoe, Andy Warhol

It’s true, no matter how you feel about him, that Andy Warhol had a huge impact on art, celebrity, society, music, print media–the list goes on and on. And for that reason alone, the exhibit is a must. But it is the personal moments that most resonate–a simple self-portrait, the portrait of his mother, Julia Warhola, the Time Capsule, the special projects and collaborations that give you a small window into the artist’s interior life. Those are the moments most valuable to me. Go. Meet the artist. He’s an interesting fellow.

But those soup cans, though.

Look for my weekly blogpost, THOUGHT PATTERNS, here, and follow me on Instagram @debmartinnyc 

 

 

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Artist Chiara Spagnoli Gabardi Brings the Whimsy of the Big Apple to Milan

 

Chiara Spagnoli
Chiara Spagnoli Gabardi

Capturing the whimsy and raw creativity that draw so many to New York is no easy task. Italian contemporary artist Chiara Spagnoli Gabardi presents her playful interpretation of the Big Apple’s persona today at The Black Sheep art gallery in the San Cristoforo neighborhood of Milan. Along with 11 other international artists, called “SuperStars,” curator Paola Omboni aims to showcase the diversity of New York-inspired art.

“Snow White in the Big Apple”

Gabardi recently concluded her fourth exhibition at the Ward Nasse Gallery in SoHo as part of the 10th edition of Women in Art curated by Leda Maria Prado. After the exhibition’s opening night, she will remain in her hometown to resume her professorship at Milan’s I.E.D. University where she teaches a Phenomenology of Contemporary Arts course.

“A Big Apple A Day Keeps The Doctor Away”

Gabardi’s artistic career began as a hobby during her college years while she earned a degree in political science from Luiss Guido Carli University in Rome. Completely self-taught, she finally gathered the courage to exhibit 30 of her pieces in Milan in 2010 after receiving positive feedback from friends and family.

“I was very coy and bashful about it. I never really thought this could become a profession,” Gabardi confessed.

She also wears several other hats as a film critic, journalist for the Italian and American press, art professor, screenwriter, and filmmaker.

“iBig Apple”

The artist defines her paintings as “Material Puns,” a combination of mixed media that relates playfully and ironically to the title of the piece. Her style has been likened to the Dada movement and Pop Art, while her use of recycled materials has earned her the label of an “eco-artist.”

“I’m trying to up-cycle and give [materials] a new meaning and a new purpose,” she explained.

Six of Gabardi’s seven pieces in SuperStar’s exhibition also embody the relationship between materials and names.

“Every time I’d go back to Milan, I’d bring all sorts of wonderful experiences from New York. During the course of the years, I made several Material Puns about the Big Apple with the actual reference to the apple we all eat, and to New York City,” she said.

The only piece that deviates from this symbolism is titled, “American Lifestyle,” and what Gabardi defines as a tribute to America, rather than just New York City.

“American Lifestyle”

“We could say [the U.S. is] a country on wheels, and I tried to channel that message through my painting,” she explained.

Yet, on the whole, Gabardi’s artistic relationship with New York City is a positive and very personal one.

“It can be a bit fatiguing at times because she can be a bit like a school mistress. She puts you to the test, and you really have to prove yourself worthy. When you do put in all that effort, she proves to be very generous,” she explained.

In the future, Gabardi plans to exhibit her work in Asia. For now, she hopes those who attend the SuperStars exhibition will enjoy her playfully ironic interpretation of New York City. It is, after all, the apple of her eye.

“Big Apple of my Eye”
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Culture Entertainment

See A Monumental Lichtenstein Resurrection Before It’s Destroyed

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Photo: Courtesy of C1.staticflickr.com

In 1983, renowned pop artist, Roy Lichenstein’s famous Greene Street Mural was erected in art dealer, Leo Castelli’s Greene Street gallery and subsequently destroyed six weeks later. The enormous 18 foot high, 96 1/2 foot long mural has been resurrected at the Gagosian Gallery in Chelsea. Located on 24th Street and 11th Avenue, the replica of the Licheinstein’s incredible work spans the wall of the gallery with his other paintings and sculptures nearby.

Thirty years later after it’s original show, the mural has been created with the help of Lichtenstein’s former studio assistant and is almost identical the the original piece. The layering of recognizable objects—composition notebooks, Swiss cheese, a roll of toilet paper—alongside Lichtenstein’s trademark colors and brushstroke style creates a dynamic visual experience that should not be missed.

In a separate room are Lichtenstein’s drafts for the mural with cutouts of inspiration. Photos of the artist and his assistants working on the original mural are mounted on the wall.

Lichtenstein’s work is pop art mastery. Inspired by comic styles, his work contains bold lines and colors with hand painted Ben-Day dots for color gradient.

The mural, which opened on September 10th, will run until October 17th.

-by Kari Sonde