Flowers - Grey/Red
Édition limitée de 500
La série Flower est l'un des projets les plus réussis d' Andy Warhol . Rompant avec ses représentations habituelles de marques, cette série s'inspire d'une photographie d'hibiscus trouvée dans le magazine Modern Photography. Selon le critique d'art David Bourdon, la manipulation vibrante des couleurs par Warhol confère à ses fleurs un effet de flottement, « comme des gouaches découpées à la Matisse, flottant sur le bassin aux nymphéas de Monet ». On dit également que la série Flower a donné naissance à l'expression « flower power », dans le contexte du vaste mouvement non-violent des années 1960.
About the Artist
Before assuming his place in history, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) as a commercial illustrator in New York for over a decade. Although he began painting in the late 1950s, he emerged into the spotlight in 1962 when he exhibited wooden replicas of Brillo soap pad boxes, along with paintings of Coca-Cola bottles, and his infamous Campbell’s soup cans. Warhol’s mass-producing silkscreen technique was key in reducing his depictions into insipid and dehumanized cultural icons that reflected the alleged emptiness of American material culture, along with Warhol’s own emotional withdrawal towards his creations. Eventually, Warhol’s work propelled him to the forefront of the emerging Pop art movement in America.
Before assuming his place in history, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) as a commercial illustrator in New York for over a decade. Although he began painting in the late 1950s, he emerged into the spotlight in 1962 when he exhibited wooden replicas of Brillo soap pad boxes, along with paintings of Coca-Cola bottles, and his infamous Campbell’s soup cans. Warhol’s mass-producing silkscreen technique was key in reducing his depictions into insipid and dehumanized cultural icons that reflected the alleged emptiness of American material culture, along with Warhol’s own emotional withdrawal towards his creations. Eventually, Warhol’s work propelled him to the forefront of the emerging Pop art movement in America.