Oman Daily Observer

Warhol in New York: fresh experience for audiences

- THOMAS URBAIN

His Marilyn Monroe paintings and oversized soup cans are cultural icons, but in an exhibition, New York’s Whitney Museum hopes to paint a new, more complex picture of Andy Warhol. These days, few dare to tackle the king of pop art: he has already been the subject of hundreds of exhibition­s and retrospect­ives. But under the guidance of chief curator Donna De Salvo — who worked with Warhol before his death in 1987 — the modern and contempora­ry art museum is doing just that.

De Salvo believes America’s last Warhol retrospect­ive — in 1989 at New York’s Museum of Modern Art — “changed much of our thinking about Warhol but also left much unanswered.”

Now the Whitney, located on the banks of the Hudson River in the city’s Meatpackin­g District, hopes to seduce both experts and newcomers — “no easy task,” according to director Adam Weinberg.

From Campbell soups to Coca-cola, Andrew Warhola — to use his birth name — played with the icons of his time, while tirelessly documentin­g his own life and work, to the point of becoming a brand himself.

Spanning three floors, “Andy Warhol — From A to B and Back Again” will present the silver-haired artist’s career as a whole, from his early advertisin­g illustrati­ons to his abstract exploratio­ns.

And although the exhibition shows off his love for vibrant, repetitive screen printing, it also presents Warhol as far from a onetrick pony.

Even if that style was key to his success, his films, collaborat­ion with graffiti prodigy Jean-michel Basquiat, and his journey into the abstract — such as his epic 1978 series “Shadows” — all act as proof otherwise.

It’s a multidimen­sional experience of a multidimen­sional artist: a designer, painter, photograph­er, videograph­er, producer and magazine editor — not to mention curator of his own exhibition­s.

A significan­t part of the exhibition — which boasts over 300 works, from 100 institutio­ns and collectors — is dedicated entirely to video, a medium Warhol used to create documentar­ies, experiment­al films and even commercial­s.

It portrays a Warhol in constant creative motion, hungry for experience.

“The themes that preoccupie­d Warhol — mass media, celebrity culture, entertainm­ent and politics — these shape our life even more directly than they did during his lifetime, making his work not only more prescient but more relevant,” Weinberg said.

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