The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

#15MinutesO­fFame: Andy Warhol was made for social media

- By Maria Sciullo

Before there even was a popular definition of social media, Andy Warhol was the human embodiment of it. The man practicall­y created the concept of bringing together people through pop culture and art — all he lacked was a modern delivery system.

Today, seeing as everyone from Barbie to your poodle has an Instagram account, what might the artist born in Pittsburgh as Andrew Warhola have done with his?

There’s no doubt that Warhol, who died in 1987 in New York City and whose 90th birthday would have been Monday, would have become an even bigger worldwide pop icon. Everything about his life — the films, the silkscreen­s, the paintings, books and even his early work in advertisin­g — was so fantastic that he and his legion of followers might well have documented it through posts, tweets and livestream events.

(Of course, Snapchat would not have been his thing, given its nature of impermanen­ce. “The idea is not to live forever,” he once said, “but to create something that will.”)

Sarah DeIuliis is a Pittsburgh native, Warhol scholar and visiting assistant professor at Duquesne University. On a recent morning, she strolled through the galleries of the Andy Warhol Museum on the North Shore to discuss this modern-day facet of Mr. Warhol’s artistic legacy.

Adapting to social media, she said, would have been a piece of cake for the everchangi­ng artist.

“I think that if you look at what he did while he was alive, he was a different artist at different times,” she said. “But he was still the pop art artist, and I think that’s something regardless of where life took him.

“If he had been alive today, I think he would have maintained, for lack of a better word, that ethos.”

Warhol famously informed his art through an early career in advertisin­g. He knew how to compose a scene on canvases large and small, which leads one to guess that Instagram would have been his platform of choice.

“It’s like that plate of food people share now on Instagram, or that blue sky. So, he’s finding the things, the symbols that would resonate with people on a different scale,” DeIuliis said.

The artist would say he considered himself a mirror of modern culture. This made his art a reflection, but perhaps not a true representa­tion of his inner monologue. For that reason, you probably could scrap the notion that he would have tweeted his 1968 stay in the hospital after being shot by Valerie Solanas.

These kinds of pics were OK for a shirtless Justin Bieber in 2013, but perhaps a bit too “out there” for Mr. Warhol, who closely guarded his personal privacy.

“I can’t say he would have been very forthright in his sharing. He wasn’t a massive sharer of his own personal life, although . he worked very hard in that cultivatio­n of Andy Warhol, as opposed to Andy Warhola, which is very important.”

Yet the artist was eager to perform. A video at the Warhol Museum shows Warhol and associate Gerard Malanga creating one of the “Marlon Brando” silkscreen­s.

“You can see he’s not uncomforta­ble (being filmed). He’s just so intent on his work,” DeIuliis said. “You can see the passion he’s putting into the silkscreen.”

Warhol’s silkscreen­s represent a very “Instagramm­able” opportunit­y. They are strikingly visual, and the images leave space for interpreta­tion.

“As he began to experiment with the technique, it was about the repetition and the bold colors, the artistic sensibilit­ies that translate into cultural values,” DeIuliis said. “I’m watching that image being repeated over and over and over again, and for me, that just kind of spoke to the beginning of his reflecting on the American culture.”

Some of his art was just beautiful fun. From his early days of drawing commercial images from a shoe company came works of whimsy. One series of shoe lithograph­s is titled “A la recherche du shoe per du.”

It’s a riff on the title of Marcel Proust’s classic novel “A la recherche du temps perdu” (“In Search of Lost Time.”)

Ponder the hashtags: #theshoemus­tgoon, or perhaps #baringmyso­le.

Not all forms of social media might have been a good fit, however. Would Warhol have embraced Facebook? Please. At the time of his death in 1987, Mr. Warhol was only 58. Although he would have fallen into the demographi­c that shares old high school photos and pictures of their grandkids, he had a much younger vibe. It’s likely he would have shunned such a fusty form of social media.

Perhaps Facebook Live or any number of social media video components would have been more attractive, DeIuliis said.

“Livestream­ing may have been something early on he would have been quite taken with,” she said. “If you look at some of his earliest documentar­ies, for example, when he does ‘Sleep,’ or the Empire State Building.

“He edits; ‘Sleep,’ in particular; he speeds up. But it’s still meant to resemble the uninterrup­ted shots of the object, and so I think that maybe when we talk about livestream­ing . . Experienci­ng that ‘in this moment’ mentality he might have found appealing.”

His “Screen Tests’ — three-minute films of hundreds of people, famous and not, just sitting in front of a silent camera — are eminently suited to social media. Even the seemingly mundane images of Brillo boxes and Campbell’s soup cans are compositio­ns carefully arranged to comment on our consumer culture.

And yes, Andy Warhol also did selfies. His first, based on a strip of photos taken in a booth at a New York City dime store in 1963, went for $7.7 million through Sotheby’s auction house last year.

Take that, Biebs.

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