Background:
Andrew Warhola, better known under his artist’s name Andy Warhol, was an American painter, graphic artist and designer, filmmaker and main representative of the pop art movement. Warhol was born on the 6th of August 1928 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in a working class family. His parents were immigrants from Czechoslovakia. From the age of eight, Warhol became very interested in drawing, movies and photography. Later Andy Warhol finished an apprenticeship as a window dresser. From 1945 until 1949 Warhol studied pictorial design at the Carnegie Institute for Technology, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree. In the same year he graduated, Warhol moved to New York, where he dropped the ‘’a’’ …show more content…
The painting illustrates the famous rock n’ roll singer Elvis Presely dressed as a cowboy. The artist used a photo effect to illustrate the picture of Elvis Presely eight times in an overlapping sequence to give the picture a perception of movement. This art piece was produced with the method of silkscrenning on canvas. The measurements of this piece are 6.5 ft. in length and 12 ft. in height. The pictures colors are mainly silver and a bit of black. It was created in 1963 and got sold in 2009 to a private collector for 100 million dollar, which made ’’Eight Elvises’’ one of the most valuable paintings of all time.
‘’Campbell's Soup …show more content…
It is made up of thirty-two single canvases, that all illustrate a single soup can from the company Campbell. The measurements of each canvas are 20 inches in height and 16 inches in width. The piece is completely hand painted with synthetic polymer paint. It was first exhibited in the Ferus Gallery of Los Angeles in 1962. The piece was originally exhibited on shelves, to create the notion or impression of products in a supermarket. The ‘’Campbell’s Soup Cans’’ clearly reflect Warhol’s former work as a commercial illustrator, which is said to be the source of inspiration for his pop art pieces. Warhol’s intention was to simulate the consistency of advertisements by serially repeating the same object. He played with the notion of changing an objects meaning by serially repeating it over and over again, until the meaning is completely vanished. The discussions about the ‘’Campbell's Soup Cans’’ had a significant impact on the rise of the pop art movement, because it’s style and subject were fuel for discussion and an insult for the movement of abstract expressionism in the United States. Today, the piece is owned and exhibited by the Museum of Modern Art in New