The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘The West is a huge part of the mythos of America’

Warhol

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before his death in 1986, depict subjects ranging from General Custer, Annie Oakley and Teddy Roosevelt to Sitting Bull and Geronimo, all in Warhol’s signature silkscreen style. “It seemed like such an anomaly,” says Hopkins. “I wondered where did these images come from? It kind of became a bit of an obsession with me to find out.”

Hopkins ended up writing his 2005 master’s thesis on the often overlooked series, arguing that, far from being anomalous, the images represent the culminatio­n of Warhol’s enduring, lifelong fascinatio­n with the American West. The “Cowboys and Indians” series now forms the center of “Warhol and the West,” a new exhibition curated by Hopkins for the museum, a gift to the city of Cartersvil­le from a local businessma­n and Western art collector who remains anonymous. (It is named after the donor’s friend and mentor, Samuel Booth.)

Hopkins says the idea of the West is far more central to Warhol and his work than it may first seem.

“It’s often been said that Andy Warhol’s art is a mirror to America,” he says. “The West is a huge part of the mythos of America, our history and our heritage. I think it’s no wonder he started doing something with the West. What he was saying is there’s the mystique of the West from the movies that gives us this glorified idea. But at the same time, he was trying to tweak us into thinking about what we have done to the country, particular­ly to the Native American population.”

During his research, Hopkins discovered just how connected Warhol was to the idea of the West throughout his life.

Growing up in Pittsburgh the son of working class immigrant parents, Warhol was fascinated with the movies, particular­ly Westerns, which were immensely popular at the time. A scrapbook of his favorite movie stars, included in the new exhibition, has pages devoted to Western stars Gene Autrey and Roy Rogers.

The artist wore Lucchese cowboy boots nearly every day of his adult life. The exhibition will display five of the 27 pair currently owned by the Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh. Warhol also owned property in Colorado and loved visiting Texas, once suggesting an Andy Warhol museum should be placed in Houston. He was an infamous hoarder, and in his collection were Native American art objects including beadwork, pottery, textiles, weapons and jewelry. Sotheby’s had to devote an entire day to the objects when 10,000 items from his estate were auctioned off after his death in 1988. A sampling of his collection will be included in the show.

Warhol also made two Western movies, the short “Horse,” about cowboys playing strip poker, and the full-length “Lonesome Cowboys,” filmed at a dude ranch outside Tucson, Arizona. A sort of precursor to “Brokeback Mountain,” “Lonesome Cowboys” was considered obscene at the time of its release, and a copy was infamously seized at an Atlanta screening in 1969. Clips of both films will be shown as part of the exhibition. Other works include Warhol’s portrait of cowboy puppet Howdy Doody, portraits of endangered species of the West and Native American activist Russell Means and images from the artist’s 1972 sunset series.

In all, the exhibition aims to show all the ways the West influenced Warhol throughout his life, culminatin­g with the final “Cowboys and Indians” project in 1986.

The new exhibition fits perfectly with the museum’s longtime mission of changing perception­s about Western art, says Hopkins. “Since the beginning we have been trying to push back against the perception­s of what Western art is by bringing in artists who are pushing those boundaries. That’s the track we’ve been on, and this is just one more chapter of that.”

‘Since the beginning we have been trying to push back against the perception­s of what Western art is by bringing in artists who are pushing those boundaries.’ Seth Hopkins Booth Western Art Museum Executive Director

 ??  ?? Andy Warhol made two Western movies, including the full-length “Lonesome Cowboys” that was filmed at a dude ranch.
Andy Warhol made two Western movies, including the full-length “Lonesome Cowboys” that was filmed at a dude ranch.
 ??  ?? Andy Warhol’s “Cowboys and Indians: Action Picture.” The 14 images in the series “Cowboys and Indians” are among the last Warhol created before his death in 1986.
Andy Warhol’s “Cowboys and Indians: Action Picture.” The 14 images in the series “Cowboys and Indians” are among the last Warhol created before his death in 1986.
 ??  ?? Andy Warhol’s “Cowboys and Indians: Annie Oakley.” A scrapbook of Warhol’s favorite movie stars, included in the new exhibition, has pages devoted to Western stars Gene Autrey and Roy Rogers.
Andy Warhol’s “Cowboys and Indians: Annie Oakley.” A scrapbook of Warhol’s favorite movie stars, included in the new exhibition, has pages devoted to Western stars Gene Autrey and Roy Rogers.
 ??  ?? Andy Warhol’s “Cowboys and Indians: Northwest Coast Mask.” The exhibition aims to show how the West influenced Warhol.
Andy Warhol’s “Cowboys and Indians: Northwest Coast Mask.” The exhibition aims to show how the West influenced Warhol.
 ??  ?? Seth Hopkins had long been fascinated by Andy Warhol’s series “Cowboys and Indians.”
Seth Hopkins had long been fascinated by Andy Warhol’s series “Cowboys and Indians.”

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