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About this product
Product Identifiers
PublisherSteidl Gmbh & Co. Ohg
ISBN-103865212417
ISBN-139783865212412
eBay Product ID (ePID)50583796
Product Key Features
Book TitleWarhol's World
Number of Pages224 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicIndividual Artists / General, Individual Photographers / General, American / General, Artists, Architects, Photographers
Publication Year2006
IllustratorYes
GenreArt, Photography, Biography & Autobiography
AuthorAnthony D'offay
FormatTrade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height1.5 in
Item Weight10.6 Oz
Item Length10 in
Item Width10 in
Additional Product Features
Intended AudienceTrade
Selected byD'Offay, Anthony
Photographed byWarhol, Andy
Number of Volumes1 vol.
SynopsisThe power in Warhol's portraits stems in part from the depth of his engagement with the society his subjects moved in. Nowhere is this involvement more clearly demonstrated than in his late photography. These previously unpublished images from the Andy Warhol Foundation reveal the reality behind the curtain at Studio 54 and the Factory, and look into the bloodshot eyes of the endless throng of celebrities that came to make up the artist's social life. If there had remained in Warhol something of the true voyeur, an alternately detached and star-struck watcher, that role largely shifted as he himself became visible in celebrity's funhouse mirrors, and became a more profoundly involved and then again more fascinated participant; Warhol's World finds the artist at the far end of that transition, at one with his subjects, all lost to themselves and found by the camera. Warhol's own position in the New York scene brought him unparalleled access to subjects like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Mick Jagger, Debbie Harry, Diana Ross, Robert Rauschenberg, Jerry Hall, Bianca Jagger, Grace Jones, Demi Moore, David Hockney, Kenny Scharf, Diana Vreeland, Paloma Picasso and Ozzy Ozbourne, and this extensive book establishes--if there was any doubt--that Warhol cared deeply about human society, human interaction, and human frailty, and took intense joy in documenting them in the microcosm that was his Village.