Arab Times

Alice Cooper finds precious Warhol work in storage

Banksy work comes top of poll of UK’s favorite artworks

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NEW YORK, July 26, (AFP): After a long career shocking audiences, even Alice Cooper has surprises. The glam rocker has discovered an Andy Warhol work that had been rolled up in storage for decades.

The red silkscreen piece, easily worth millions of dollars, adapts a printed image of an electric chair as part of the pop artist’s “Death and Disaster” phase in the 1960s.

Cooper, who befriended Warhol while living in New York, received “Little Electric Chair” as a gift but had not seen it since 1972 or 1973, the singer’s longtime manager Shep Gordon told AFP.

“Only in rock ‘n’ roll can you not remember you have a Warhol!” Gordon said with a laugh.

Cooper — the pioneer of shock rock who puts on elaborate, macabre shows — was a heavy drinker in the 1970s, but Gordon said it was understand­able he would forget about the artwork.

“It was a very different time. Andy wasn’t dead, his pictures weren’t valuable and Alice was headlining Madison Square Garden and tickets were $3.50,” he said.

Gordon said he recalled the piece several years ago at a dinner with an art dealer friend who mentioned the high price that a Warhol had fetched.

Hunted

Cooper hunted and found “Little Electric Chair,” still rolled up, in a storage unit alongside old equipment.

Gordon said the 69-year-old Cooper, who actively tours and whose latest album comes out Friday, has not decided what to do with “Little Electric Chair” other than to have it properly framed.

Warhol made a series of “Little Electric Chair” pieces, including one that auction house Christie’s sold in 2014 for more than $10 million. Others are in collection­s of the Tate Modern in London and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Cooper had been given the work as a birthday gift from then girlfriend Cindy Lang, who was part of the New York undergroun­d rock scene alongside Warhol, who famously worked with The Velvet Undergroun­d.

Gordon said Warhol became fixated on the electric chair as he remained disturbed by the 1953 executions of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who were convicted of spying for the Soviet Union.

Cooper in his early years would die in a mock execution at each show — by hanging, electric chair and later the guillotine.

“It wasn’t a conscious tie-in, but artistical­ly it was sort of the same statement,” Gordon said of the two artists’ use of the jarring image of the electric chair.

“If you stop any frame on the Alice Cooper show, it sort of looks like a Salvador Dali painting. It’s lots of abstract images — and a juxtaposit­ion of things that shouldn’t be in that place.”

LONDON:

Also:

A graffiti work of a girl losing a heart-shaped balloon by notorious artist Banksy is favourite artwork, according to a poll out Wednesday.

The “Balloon Girl” stencil painting, which appeared on the side of shop in east London in 2002, topped the shortlist of best British artworks, as voted on by 2,000 people.

The artwork was removed and sold in 2014 for around £500,000 (560,000 euros, $651,000).

1821 pastoral landscape “The Hay Wain” came in second, with 1992 painting “The Singing Butler” coming in third. JMW Turner’s 1839 “The Fighting Temeraire,” which depicts a boat being tugged along the Thames, came fourth in the poll, conducted for Samsung TV, while

1998 sculpture “The Angel Of The North”, which looms over a major road to the south of Newcastle, was voted fifth. Three album covers were in the top 20, including cover for The Beatles’ “Sgt Pepper”, Hipgnosis and work for “Dark Side of the Moon” and “Never Mind the Bollocks” Sex Pistols sleeve.

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