Three 80s Portraits by Warhol at Bonhams

basquiat-birdonmoney
basquiat – bird on money

“I ritratti degli anni 1980 sono come capsule del tempo per le generazioni future, una vasta popolazione di reperti umani proveniente dal nostro passato ormai remoto, pronta a risorgere sotto lo sguardo di una giovane mente”.

Robert Rosenblum, Andy Warhol Portraits (2007)

La serie di ritratti di Andy Warhol degli anni ’80 ha visto una radicale rivalutazione negli ultimi dieci anni. Sono ora riconosciuti tra le opere più interessanti e affermate dell’artista. L’asta Post-War & Contemporary Art del 12 febbraio 2015 di Bonhams a New Bond Street sarà caratterizzata da tre di questi ritratti, ognuno raffigurante un amico dell’artista: la “socialite” Marjorie Copley, il fotografo, Robert Mapplethorpe, e l’artista di fama mondiale , Jean-Michel Basquiat.

Warhol può essere citato come colui che ha portato a nuova vita la tradizione ritrattistica trascurata nel corso del decennio che lo ha inequivocabilmente caratterizzato, e i tre lotti che Bonhams offre, ciascuno eseguito con uno strumento diverso, sono i principali simboli del suo lavoro in un momento cruciale della sua carriera.

Con la serigrafia che ritrae Marjorie Copley (1980), stimata in £ 180,000-250,000, Warhol cattura una graziosa e delicata posa della donna, con uno sguardo quasi timido a preludere un sorriso leggero, impercettibile. Questo è Warhol nella sua versione più chic.

Andy Warhol (1928-1987) Portrait of Marjorie Copley 1980
Andy Warhol (1928-1987) Portrait of Marjorie Copley 1980

Al tempo in cui Marjorie posò per il ritratto, aveva poco interesse per la frenetica atmosfera bohemien dello studio di Warhol, The Factory. La calma e il distacco che mostra sono evidenti ma non fanno che accrescere il fascino di questa immagine. Forse era proprio questo il messaggio che Warhol voleva trasmettere.

Il ritratto del celebre fotografo americano, Robert Mapplethorpe (divenuto famoso nel 1973 per la prima mostra personale, “Polaroids”, presso la Light Gallery di New York), del 1983, è una serigrafia unica ed è stimata in £ 50000-70000. Mapplethorpe ha condiviso un profondo interesse con Warhol nella ritrattistica, anche se il suo lavoro era incentrato sull’estetica del corpo, piuttosto che sulle celebrità ed il glamour di New York catturati da Warhol. La loro fu una vera e propria amicizia con la conseguente serie di opere reciproche. Nel 1983, Mapplethorpe fece quattro ritratti di Warhol – uno dei quali è al Tate Modern – e Warhol una collezione di serigrafie del fotografo, di cui quella in asta è una.

Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) Robert Mapplethorpe 1983
Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) Robert Mapplethorpe 1983

La Polaroid dell’artista americano, Jean-Michel Basquiat, “il James Dean dell’arte moderna” eseguito da Warhol nel 1982, è stimato £ 12,000-18,000. Warhol è stato un mentore ed un mecenate per Basquiat a partire dal 1980 fino alla morte del ragazzo per overdose di eroina nel 1987. Dopo aver conosciuto il giovane writer e pittore statunitense (uno dei più importanti esponenti del graffitismo americano, il primo a portare questa arte dalle strade alle gallerie d’arte), Warhol ha stabilito una collaborazione rappresentata da una serie di dipinti tra il 1983 e il 1985 su suggerimento del mercante d’arte svizzero Bruno Bischofberger, portando alla notorietà il talento del giovane ma sfortunato artista americano.

Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) Jean-Michel Basquiat 1982
Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) Jean-Michel Basquiat 1982

info on www.bonhams.com


Three portraits from the artist’s most celebrated 1980s series across three distinct media: acrylic on canvas, silkscreen and Polaroid.

“Intimate depictions of friends offering a glimpse into the frenzied excitement of the 1980s New York art scene ‘The portraits of the 1980s as “time capsules” for future generations, a vast population of human relics from our buried past, ready to be resurrected by fresh eyes and minds”. Robert Rosenblum, Andy Warhol Portraits (2007)

Andy Warhol’s series of portraits from the 1980s have enjoyed a radical reappraisal during the last decade. They are now recognised as some of the artist’s most compelling and accomplished works. The Post-War & Contemporary Art auction on 12 February 2015 at Bonhams New Bond Street will feature three of these portraits, each depicting a friend of the artist: the socialite, Marjorie Copley, the photographer, Robert Mapplethorpe, and the world-renowned artist, Jean-Michel Basquiat.

Portraits of important figures in fashionable circles have been a cornerstone of artistic production for centuries, from Titian’s depictions of the rich and powerful to John Singer Sargent’s paintings of society beauties. Warhol can be credited with reviving the neglected tradition of portraiture during the 1980s – a decade which he made his own – and the three lots on offer at Bonhams, each executed in a different medium, are prime examples of his portrait work at a pivotal moment of his career.

The Portrait of Marjorie Copley (1980), estimated at £180,000-250,000, is a remarkably elegant acrylic and silkscreen ink portrait. In a departure from the bold images in brazen Pop Art colours which dominated his work during this period, Warhol captures Copley in a graceful, delicate pose, her long hair running down her back, her mouth bearing the slight suggestion of a smile, and renders her in a subdued palette with just the occasional dash of vivid acrylic. This is Warhol at his most chic and stately.

Warhol knew Marjorie through the celebrated American artist, William Copley, to whom she was married at the time the work was painted, but Marjorie had little interest in the frenzied, bohemian scene of Warhol’s studio, The Factory. Her calmness and detachment is evident in the portrait, which rejects the bright chaos of other portraits; only her piercing blue eyes and cherry-red lips are accentuated, and the lines of her body and face are gentle. It is, says Martina Batovic, Specialist in the Contemporary Department at Bonhams, ‘a simple yet exquisite portrait’.

Warhol’s portrait of the American photographer, Robert Mapplethorpe, from 1983, is a unique screenprint on lenox museum board, and is estimated at £50,000-70,000. Mapplethorpe shared Warhol’s deep interest in portraiture, although his work focussed on the aesthetics of the anatomised body, rather than the celebrities and glamour of 1980s New York captured by Warhol. A genuine friendship and intimacy developed between the two artists, resulting in a series of reciprocal works on art. In 1983, Mapplethorpe made four portraits of Warhol – one of which hangs in the Tate Modern – and Warhol created a collection of silkscreens of the photographer, of which the present work is one. As such, it is part of the narrative which brought together two pioneers of American art.

The Polaroid print of the American artist, Jean-Michel Basquiat, which was made by Warhol in 1982, is estimated at £12,000-18,000. Warhol was a mentor for Basquiat during the 1980s until his death in 1987, having met the young painter at a New York restaurant in 1980, and the pair worked on a series of collaborative paintings between 1983 and 1985 at the suggestion of the Swiss art dealer, Bruno Bischofberger. The photograph shows a fresh-faced Basquiat, his hair in trademark bunches, staring confrontationally into the camera.

info on www.bonhams.com

Hollywood Icons & Music Legends – Christie’s Pop Culture Sale december 16, 2014

South Kensington – Il 16 dicembre a South Kensington si terrà l’asta Pop Culture di Christie, presentando cimeli della storia del Rock, Pop e del cinema. La vendita celebra alcuni dei più grandi nomi del cinema del 20° secolo, leggende della musica di oggi, costumi e gli script di film, strumenti e testi delle canzoni scritti a mano e altro ancora. Il catalogo al completo sarà in mostra presso la galleria Old Brompton Road a South Kensington dal 13 al 16 dicembre 2014. Le stime vanno da £ 800 a £ 300.000.

Un elaborato e suggestivo costume in stile “harem” indossato da Marilyn Monroe in un servizio fotografico del celebre fotografo Richard Avedon è il top lot del catalogo (stima: £ 300.000-500.000). Il costume indossato dall’attrice è stato pubblicato sul numero di dicembre 1958 della rivista Life. La Monroe si fece ritrarre nel tentativo di convincere il presidente della Fox ad affidargli la parte di Cleopatra nel colossal che invece vide in quella parte Liz Taylor.

I fan della serie Terminator hanno la rara opportunità di aggiudicarsi il mitico giubbotto in pelle nera indossato da Arnold Schwarzenegger  nel film “Terminator 2: Il giorno del giudizio” (stima: £ 18,000-25,000). Questa giacca, con la scritta “ARNOLD” all’interno, ha numerosi fori di proiettile ed è stata utilizzata durante le riprese nella scena nel centro commerciale, quando Terminator per proteggere John Connor dal fuoco del T-1000 è ripetutamente colpito dalle pallottole nella parte posteriore.

Un rarissimo prototipo di chitarra elettrica Gretsch Irish Falcon, realizzato per il frontman degli U2 Bono Vox e firmata da tutti e quattro i membri della band (stima: £ 120,000-180,000). Bono ordinò alla Gretsch dieci chitarre “Irish Falcon” per l’Elevation Tour del 2001 e successivamente donò questo esemplare all’asta per raccogliere fondi per la Fondazione MusiCares. Si tratta di uno dei primi prototipi originali Irish Falcons commissionati dal leader degli U2 ad essere venduti in un’asta pubblica, questa chitarra di sicuro attrarrà l’interesse degli appassionati e collezionisti del genere.

Bob Dylan è considerato il più grande cantautore del nostro tempo, ma non tutti sanno che prima di scrivere musica amò il disegno e la pittura. Dylan ha iniziato a dipingere seriamente durante il periodo di convalescenza dovuto al suo incidente motociclistico del 1966. L’asta Pop Culture presenta ai fan di Dylan la possibilità di aggiudicarsi un suo ritratto con soggetto la moglie Sara in attesa. Fu eseguito nell’estate del 1968 ed è accompagnato da una copia della autobiografia di George Harrison “I, Me, Mine”, con una fotografia in bianco e nero di Dylan e Harrison a casa di Dylan a Woodstock nel 1968 con il dipinto sullo sfondo (stima: £ 50000-70000).

Una copertina autografata dell’album Thriller” di Michael Jackson (stima: £ 25,000-35,000). Jackson ha firmato questa copertina per un evento di beneficenza a Budapest l’8 settembre 1996 in occasione del History Tour ed ha scritto il testo della prima strofa di Thriller.

I dettagli su www.christie’s.com

By Andrea Foffi e Manuel Galvez

http://www.meridianae.cominfo@meridianae.com

http://www.oredelmondo.cominfo@oredelmondo.com


South Kensington – Christie’s bi-annual 20/21 Pop Culture sale returns to South Kensington on 16 December, presenting music and film aficionados with memorabilia associated with kings of rock, pop and Hollywood. The sale celebrates some of the greatest names of 20th century cinema through to today’s music legends, featuring costumes and film scripts, instruments and handwritten song lyrics and more. The full sale can be viewed here and will be on public exhibition at Christie’s Old Brompton Road galleries in South Kensington from 13 to 16 December 2014. Estimates range from £800 to £300,000.

An elaborate and evocative harem costume worn by Hollywood icon Marilyn Monroe in a photo shoot with famed photographer Richard Avedon is a highlight of this December’s sale (estimate: £300,000-500,000). Ms. Monroe portrayed five legendary screen seductresses – Lillian Russell, Jean Harlow, Marlene Dietrich, Clara Bow and Theda Bara – in this Avedon shoot, which featured in the 22 December 1958 issue of Life magazine. The costume was worn by the actress when posing as Theda Bara, recreating Bara’s most famous role of Cleopatra. Monroe actively pursued the role of Cleopatra and sent Avedon’s portrait of her posing in this costume as Theda Bara’s Cleopatra to the President of Fox, in an attempt to persuade him that she was right for the part. Though the role went to Elizabeth Taylor, Monroe spoke of her shoot with Avedon as one of the greatest moments of her career.

Fans of The Terminator series should not miss a rare opportunity to acquire a black leather motorcycle jacket made for Arnold Schwarzenegger as the title role in the 1991 Columbia film Terminator 2: Judgement Day (estimate: £18,000-25,000, illustrated right and on page one). Several leather jackets were created for the film in progressive stages of distress, from clean through to completely shredded. This jacket, inscribed ‘ARNOLD’ in the collar lining, has numerous simulated bullet holes and is thought to have been used during filming of the Galleria mall scene, when the Terminator turns to shield John Connor from the T-1000’s gunfire and is repeatedly shot in the back.

Leading the contemporary section of the sale is a custom prototype Gretsch Irish Falcon electric guitar (estimate: £120,000-180,000), made for U2 frontman Bono and signed by all four members of the band. Bono commissioned Gretsch to build ten “Irish Falcon” guitars for U2’s 2001 Elevation tour. Since then, the Irish Falcon has remained Bono’s primary stage guitar, used during performances of Walk On and One. To recognise his accomplishments as a musician and humanitarian, Bono was honoured as 2003 MusiCares Person of the Year at a special tribute dinner, concert and silent auction at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York. He donated this guitar to the auction to raise funds for the MusiCares Foundation. One of the first original ‘prototype’ Irish Falcons custom made for Bono to come to public auction, this guitar is sure to attract interest from fans and collectors alike.

Fans of the Grateful Dead will instantly recognise Jerry Garcia’s iconic hand-painted ‘Uncle Sam’ top hat (estimate: £30,000-50,000). This hat was owned and worn by Garcia on various occasions in 1966 and ‘67 as ‘Captain Trips’, including the now famous shoots with Gene Anthony on the steps of the Grateful Dead communal house at 710 Ashbury St. and with Herb Greene at the home of Gene Estribou. Photographs from both shoots were used for the cover and liner of the Grateful Dead’s 1967 debut album, The Grateful Dead. This hat was part of Jerry Garcia’s personal wardrobe until he gave it to his friend and neighbour, Harry Tsvi Strauch. Strauch had asked to borrow the hat for a red, white & blue American flag themed window display in his shop, and Garcia insisted Strauch keep it.

Whilst Bob Dylan is primarily celebrated as the greatest singer-songwriter of our time, he began drawing in high school before he ever started writing music. Dylan started to paint seriously during his period of retreat to quiet family life in Woodstock, following his 1966 motorcycle accident. The Pop Culture sale presents Dylan fans with the opportunity to acquire an intimate portrait of his then pregnant wife, Sara, painted in the summer of 1968, soon after Dylan received his first box of oil paints (estimate: £50,000-70,000). Untitled (Sara) is accompanied by a copy of George Harrison’s autobiography I, Me, Mine, featuring a black and white photograph of Dylan and Harrison at Dylan’s home in Woodstock in 1968 that shows this painting on the wall.

The rich selection of film scripts and song lyrics presented include an extremely rare signed album cover for Michael Jackson’s 1982 album Thriller (estimate: £25,000-35,000). Jackson signed this album cover for a charity event in Budapest on 8 September 1996 during the HIStory tour and wrote the lyrics for the first verse and first line of the chorus of the title track, Thriller. Also featured are a rare set of complete, handwritten lyrics in Pete Townshend’s hand for The Who song The Acid Queen, 1969 (estimate: £15,000-25,000). Celebrated as one of the greatest and most visionary songwriters of the sixties, handwritten lyrics by Townshend are extremely rare and this is the first example to appear for sale at Christie’s.

A rare set of first, second and third draft screenplays from the 1972 Paramount Pictures film The Godfather is expected to fetch between £6,000 and £8,000. The screenplays are working copies used by the original assistant director, Stephen Kesten, with various annotations and revisions.

To celebrate the 75th year anniversary of the 1939 M.G.M. film Gone With The Wind highlights include a rare dialogue cutting continuity script used by supervising film editor, Hal C. Kern, who won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for his work on Gone With The Wind (estimate: £7,000-9,000); a presentation script signed by producer David O. Selznick (estimate £6,000-8,000) and a 1938 edition of the book signed by members of the cast and crew including Vivien Leigh, Clark Gable, Leslie Howard, Hattie McDaniel, Olivia de Havilland and Victor Fleming (estimate: £4,000-6,000).

By Andrea Foffi e Manuel Galvez

www.meridianae.com – info@meridianae.com

www.oredelmondo.com – info@oredelmondo.com