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- “Being good in business is the most fascinating kind of art,” said Warhol. “Making money is art, and working is art, and good business is the best art.” He loved money, but we knew that already. Many critics didn’t hesitate to call him a whore when he started doing commissioned portraits of celebrities.
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Apr 21, 2020 · Andy Warhol coined 'Business Art' as a way to describe his most conceptual art project. Read an excerpt from Blake Gopnick's biography.
Nov 1, 2018 · Business Art so thoroughly rewrote the rules of art-making, even maybe its morality, that many artists found more direct inspiration in aspects of Warhol’s art that are less conceptual — his ...
In this respect Warhol was a fan of "Art Business" and "Business Art"—he, in fact, wrote about his interest in thinking about art as business in The Philosophy of Andy Warhol from A to B and Back Again.
- Carnegie Institute of Technology (Carnegie Mellon University)
- Pop art
- Printmaking, painting, cinema, photography
- St. John the Baptist Byzantine Catholic Cemetery, Bethel Park, Pennsylvania
Aug 6, 2018 · RSS. It’s no coincidence that avant-garde artist Andy Warhol called his studio The Factory. He embraced the commodification of art and called himself a business-artist, which as art critic...
- Childhood
- Early Training
- Mature Period
- Late Years and Death
- The Legacy of Andy Warhol
Andy was the third child born to Czechoslovakian immigrant parents, Ondrej and Ulja (Julia) Warhola, in a working class neighborhood of Pittsburgh. He had two older brothers, John and Paul. As a child, Andy was smart and creative. His mother, a casual artist herself, encouraged his artistic urges by giving him his first camera at nine years old. Wa...
After graduating from high school at the age of 16 in 1945, Warhol attended Carnegie Institute of Technology (now Carnegie Mellon University), where he received formal training in pictorial design. Shortly after graduating, in 1949, he moved to New York City, where he worked as a commercial illustrator. His first project was for Glamour magazine fo...
In September 1960, after moving to a townhouse at 1342 Lexington Avenue, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, he began his most prolific period. From having no dedicated studio space in his previous apartment, where he lived with his mother, he now had plenty of room to work. In 1962 he offered the Department of Real Estate $150 a month to rent a n...
In the late 1970s and 1980s, Warhol made a return to painting, and produced works that frequently verged on abstraction. His Oxidation Painting series, which were made by urinating on a canvas of copper paint, echoed the immediacy of the Abstract Expressionists and the rawness of Jackson Pollock's drip paintings. By the 1980s, Warhol had regained m...
Andy Warhol was one of the most influential artists of the second half of the 20thcentury, creating some of the most recognizable images ever produced. Challenging the idealist visions and personal emotions conveyed by abstraction, Warhol embraced popular culture and commercial processes to produce work that appealed to the general public. He was o...
- American
- August 6, 1928
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- February 22, 1987
Apr 16, 2024 · Andy Warhol (born August 6, 1928, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died February 22, 1987, New York, New York) was an American artist and filmmaker, an initiator and leading exponent of the Pop art movement of the 1960s whose mass-produced art apotheosized the supposed banality of the commercial culture of the United States.
Nov 7, 2018 · How He Made Business His Art. Andy Warhol sits in his favorite chair in New York, Feb. 27, 1968. In the fall of 1968, still aching from an assassin’s attack, Andy Warhol returned to work in the ...