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Dracula by Andy Warhol |
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| Title |
Dracula |
| Artist |
Andy Warhol (1928 -1987) |
| Medium | Screenprint on Lenox Museum Board. |
| Origin/Date | New York, 1981 |
| Edition | Edition of 200, Signed |
| Size | 96.5 x 96.5 cm (38 x 38 in) |
| Printer | Rupert Jasen Smith, New York |
| Publisher | Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, New York |
| Reference | F. Feldman, J. Schellmann Andy Warhol Prints: A Catalogue Raisonne 1962-1987, Milan, 1997, II.264 |
| Condition | mint condition (from original portfolio) |
| Stock ID | 24 |
| Price £ | POA framed SOLD |
Dracula by Warhol As early as his comic strip and Campbell's Soup-can paintings of the early 1960s, Warhol exhibited an unerring sense for the powerful motifs of his time -- contemporary images that captured the modern imagination as completely as the gods and
goddesses of ancient mythology once did. Interestingly, in choosing Myths as the title of his 1981 portfolio of 10 screen prints, Warhol was referring not to remote civilizations, but to the beginnings of the cinema and the
imaginary
characters
loved and recognized by millions all over the world. Dracula by Andy Warhol derives from the movies; the Myths Series are Warhol's first and only depictions of imaginary persons.
Reminiscent of
the
artist's own
earlier
work,
as well as
common
childhood memories and dated media personalities, Warhol's Myths Series relies heavily on nostalgia for its impact.
Most images in Warhol's Myths Series are taken from old
Hollywood films or
1950s
television.
The majority
of
them are
fantasy characters from childhood and, typical of Warhol, they are all American or Americanized subjects. With his Myths Series, he portrayed nothing less than the
universal view of
America's once
enchanted
and
powerful past.
From
the outset,
Warhol was working from an understanding of the degree to which images are bound by context. He understood that they are what they are, because of
where they are, who
made them and how
their
virtues are
described
in
language.
Included
in
the Myths Series is this particular print entitled Dracula.
copyright The Children's Museum of Indianapolis
Signed and
numbered in
pencil verso. Limited
edition
print. F&S II. 264
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