Crow, Saturday Disasters
Crow, Saturday Disasters
FILES
ANDY WARHOL
OCTOBER FILES 2
Contents
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Library of Congre" Cataloging-in-l'ublication I )ata
Andy W1rhol I edited by Annette Michebon ; essays by lknJlrnin H. D. Buchloh ... Jet ai.J.
p. ern.- (Onober files; 2)
Includes bibliographical rcfen:nn:s and index.
ISBN 0-2(,2- I J.J()(,_J (he.: alk. paper) -ISBN 0-262-63242-X (pbk.: alk. paper)
1. Warhol, Andy, 1'J2~- -Criticism and interpretation. I. Warhol,
Andy, 1'J2~- 11. Michcl>n, Annetce. III.Buchloh,ll. H. D. IV. Series.
Nr,:>J7.W2~ A7~~
71J'J'.2-dc21
21!01
Series Preface
vii
Acknowledgments
ix
Benjamin H. D. Buchloh
(1989)
Thomas Crow
49
Hal Foster
69
Annette Michelson
91
111
Rosalind E. Krauss
Benjamin H. D. Buchloh
Index of Names
131
119
Thomas Crow
Silver Disaster, 1963. Silkscreen ink on synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 42 x 60 in. The
Sonnabend Collection.
The public Warhol was not one but, at a minimum, three persons. The r>
first, and by f.1r the most prominent, was the self-created one: the product
of his famous pronouncements and of the allowed representations of his
life and milieu. The second was the complex ofinterests,sentiments,skills,
ambitions, and passions actually figured in paint on canvas. The third was
his persona as it sanctioned experiments in nonelite culture far beyond the
world of art. 1 Of these three, the latter two are of far greater importance
than the first, though they were normally overshadowed by the man who
said he wanted to be like a machine, that everyone would be famous fo,r
fifteen minutes, and that he and his art were all surf.1ce: don't look any further. The second Warhol is normally equated with the first; and the third.
at least by historians and critics of art, is largely ignored.
This essay is primarily concerned with the second Warhol, though
this will necessarily entail attention to the first. The conventional reading
of his work turns around a few circumscribed themes: the impersonality
of the images he chose and their presentation, his passivity in the face of a
media-saturated reality, and the suspension in his work of any clear authorial voice. His choice of subject matter is regarded as essentially indiscriminate. Little interest is displayed in his subjects beyond the observation that,
in their totality, they represent the random play of a consciousness at the
mercy of the commonly available commercial culture. The debate over
Warhol centers on whether his art fosters critical or subversive apprehension of mass culture and the power of the image as commodity, 2 succumbs
in an innocent but telling way to that numbing power;1 or exploits it cynically and meretriciously. 4
A relative lack of concentration on the evidence of the early pictures
has made a notoriously elusive figure more elusive than he needs to be-
so
Thomas Crow
The spectacle of overwhelming Western affluence was the ideological weapon in which the Kennedy administration had made its great;st in\'Cst~nent, ~nd it is ~t:iking to .find Warhol seizing on that image and negating
Its rece1~ed polmcalmeanmg (affluence equals freedom and individualism)
m an effort to explain his work. Reading that interview now, one is further struck by t~e bar~ly suppressed anger present throughout his responses.
as well as by the 1rony m the phrases that would later congeal into the cliches
Of.c~~me, .to ge~1eralize from this in order to imput,e some specificall~:
polltlC!zed 111tent1ons to the artist would be to repeat the error in interpretatiOn referred to above-to use a convenient textual crutch to avoid the
harder work of confronting the paintings directly. A closer look at such
~tate1:1ents ~s these, however, can at least prepare us for unexpected mean111gs 111 the Images, meanings possibly more complex or critical than the
received reading of Warhol's work would lead us to believe.
. Th~ princip~l thesis of this essay is that Warhol, though he grounded
Ius art 111 the ubiquity of the packaged commodity, produced his most
powerful work by dramatizing the breakdown of commodity exchange.
Th~se were instances in which the mass-produced image as the bearer, of
desires ~vas exposed in its inadequacy by the reality of suffering and death.
Into this category, for example, f.1lls his most f.1mous portrait series, that of
Marilyn Monroe. He began the pictures within weeks of Monroe's suicide
in August 1962, and it is remarkable how consistently this simple [1ct goes
unremarked in the literature. 1' Her death was something with wl1 ich
Warho~ clearly had to deal, and the pictures represent a lengthy act of
mourn111g, much of the motivation for which lies beyond our understanding. (Some of the artist's formal choices refer to this memorial or funeral function directly, especially the single. impression of her f.1ce against
the gold background of an icon [Gold Marily11 lHonroc, Museum of Modern Art], the traditional sign of an eternal other world.) Once undertaken,
however, the series raised issues that continue to involve us all. How does
~n~ handle the fact of celebrity death? Where does one put the curiously
mtanate knowledge one possesses of an unknown figure, and how does
~ne come to terms with the sense ofloss-the absence of a richly imagmed presence that was never really there? For some it might be Monroe,
for others Buddy Holly or a Kennedy: the problem is the same.
. Any cm.nplexity of thought or feeling in Warhol's Marily11s may be
diffict~lt to discern from our present vantage point. Not only does his myth
stand m the way, but the portraits' seeming acceptance of the reduction of
Sl
52
Thomas Crow
a \Voman 's identity to a mass commodity fetish can make the entire series
seem a monument to the benighted past or unrepentant present. Though
Warhol obviously had little stake in the erotic fascination felt for her by the
male intellectuals of the fifties generation-de Kooning and Mailer, for
example 7 -he may indeed have failed to resist it sufficiently in his art. It is
far from the intent of this essay to redeem whatever contribution Warhol's
pictures have made to perpetuating that mystique. But there are ways in
which the majority of the Monroe paintinbrs, when viewed apart from the
Marilyn I goddess cult, exhibit a degree of tact, even reverence, that withholds outright complicity with it.
That effect of ironic remove began in the process of creating the
silkscreen transfer. Its source is a bust-length publicity still in black and
white taken in 1953 for the film 1\lia,(!ara.' The print that Warhol used,
marked for cropping with a grease pencil, survives in the archives ofhis estate. A f.1ce shot in color from the same session was one of the best-known
images of the young actress, but Warhol instead opted for a physically
smaller segment o( one taken at a greater distance from its subject. In its
alignment with the four-square rectangle of Warhol's ruled grid, the face
takes on a solid, self-contained quality that both answers to the formal order of Warhol's compositional grids and undercuts Monroe's practiced
and expected way of courting the male eye behind the camera. An instructive comparison can be made between the effect of Warhol's alteration of his source and James Rosenquist's Marily11 Mo11roc I of 1962
(Museum of Modern Art); for all of the fragmentation and interference
that the latter artist imposes on the star portrait, its mannered coquettishness is precisely what he lingers over and preserves.
The beginning of the Marily11 series coincides with the moment of
Warhol's commitment to the silkscreen technique,'' and there is a close link
between technique and meaning. Compared to the Rosenquist or to the
vivid, fine-grained color of the studio face portrait, his manipulation and :.
enlargement of a monochrome fragment drain away much of the imagi- \
nary living presence of the star. The inherently flattering and simplifying J
effects of the transformation from photograph to f.1bric stencil to inked
canvas are magnified rather than concealed. The screened image, reproduced whole, has the character of an involuntary imprint. It is a memorial ..J
in the sense of resembling memory: powerfully selective, sometimes elusive,
sometimes vividly present, always open to embellishment as well as loss.
In the 1'vlarily11 Diptych (Tate Gallery), also painted in 1962, Warhol lays
out a stark and unresolved dialectic of presence and absence, of life and
death. The lett side is a monument; color and lite are restored. but as a secondary and invariant mask added to something tar more fugitive. Against
the quasi-official regularity and uniformity of the left panel, the right concedes the absence of its subject, displaying openly the elusive and uninformative trace underneath. The right panel neverthekss manages subtle
shadinbrs of meaning within its limited technical scope. There is a reference
to the material of film that goes beyond the repetition of trames. On a
simple level, it reminds us that the best and most enduring film memories one has of Monroe-in The Scl'c/1- Year Itch, Some Like It Hot, "f7H A/is.flls-are in black and white. The color we add to her memory is
suppl~n~eJ~t~z:' In a more general sense, she is most real and.bes~ remembered.-\
111 the A1ckenng passage of film exposures, not one of wluch IS ever wholly
present to perception. The heavy inking in one vertical register underscores this. The passage from life to death reverses itself; she is most present
where her image is least permanent. In this way, the Dipty(h stands as a
comment on and complication of the embalmed quality, the slightly repellent stasis, of the Cold Marily11.
Having taken up the condition of the celebrity as trace and sign, it is
not surprising that Warhol would soon move to the image of Elizabeth
Taylor. She and Monroe were nearly equal and unchallenged as Hollywood divas with larger-than-life personal myths. Each was maintained in
her respective position by a kind of negative symmetry with the other, by
representing what the other was not.
He then completed his triangle of female celebrity for the early 1960s
with a picture of Jacqueline Kennedy in the same basic format as the fullface portraits of Monroe and Taylor. The president's wife did not share
film stardom with Monroe, but she did share the Kennedys. She also possessed the distinction of having established for the period a changed feminine ideal. Her slim, dark, aristocratic standard of beauty had made
Monroe's style, and thus her power as a symbol, seem out of date even before her death. (That new standard was mimicked within the Warhol circle by Edie Sedgewick, for a time his constant companion and seeming
alter ego during the period.) Warhol reinforced that passe quality by
choosing for his series a photograph of Monroe from the early 1950s; by
that simple choice, he measured a historical distance between her life and
her symbolic function, while avoiding the signs of aging and mental collapse.
The semiotics of style that locked together Warhol's images of the
three women represents, however, only one of the bonds between them.
53
54
ThomasCr
Sixteen jackies, 1964. Silkscreen ink on synthetic polymer paint on canvas; sixteen panels, each
20 x 16 in ., overall 80 x 64 in. Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.
The other derived from the threat or ac tuality of death. The full - face portraits of the Liz series, though generated by a transformation of the Marilyns, in fact had an earlier origin. Taylor' famous cata trophic illness in
1961 - the collapse that interrupted the filming of Cleopatm-had entered
into one of Warhol's early tabloid paintings, Daily Te111s ( 1962). The contemporaneous rhythm of crises in the health of both women had joined
them in the public mind (and doubtless Warhol' as well) in that year; it was
My reading of Warhol has thus far pr ceed d by e. tablishing relationships among his early portraits. It an be expa nd ed to include the apparently anodyne icons of co nsumer product for which the arti. t is
equally renowned. Even those fami liar image. take on unexpected meanings in the context of hi other work f the period . For example. in 1963,
the year after the Campbell' soup can imagery had established hi name,
Warhol did a serie of pictures under the title Tt111~fish Disaster. These arc,
understandably eno ugh, lesser-known works, but they feature the repeated
images of an analogous object, a ca n of A&P- brand tuna. In this instance,
however, the contents of the can were su peered of having killed people,
and newspaper photographs of the victims are repeated below those of the
deadly conta in er . The wary smile f Mrs. McCarthy, the broad grin of
Mrs. B rown, a each posed with se lf-con cio us sincerity [; r their snapshot , and the look of the clothe , glas es, and hair tyles peak the language
55
56
Thomas Crow
Tunafish Disaster, 1963. Silkscreen ink on synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 124 ~ x 83 in.
Saatchi Collection, London.
of cia in America. The women s workaday face and the black co im~
penned on the can tran form the mas -produ ed ommodtt) into ,111) thing but a neutral ab traction.
More than rhi . of c ur c. rhe picture. commemor,lte a moment when
rhe supermarket pr mi e of safe and abundant pacbged t<.x)(l ",l\ dt,,l,tr usly brok..:n. Doe. Warhol'. rendition of rhe di a. ter render it sate!) neu tral? I rhmk not, no more than it would be po sible for an ,1rn r ro ,tddre
the more recent panic over tampering with nonpre cnprion medinnt''
without confronting the kind of anxiet) they expre . . In this else, tht repetition of the crude image doe. force attention ro the awful b,ln ,llitY of
the accident and the tawdry exploitation by which we come to know the
misfortune f tranger , but it does nor mock attempt at emp.lth ',however feeble. or do the image. direct our attention to some peculiar!)
twentieth-century c trangement bet\ ccn the ennt an :lit represcnt.ltion :
the misfortunes of tranger have made up the primar content of the press
ince there ha been a pre . The Tillla.f1sh Disaster picrure r.1ke .m est~lb
lished feature of pop imagery, e tabli hed by other a. well a: by a rho!,
and pu h it into a context decided! other than that of con. umption. e
do not con ume the new of the e death. in the a me way that we conume the safe (one hope) content of a can.
A1 ng imilar line , a link can be made to the everal scrie. that use
photographs of automob il e accidents. These commemorate events in
which the supreme ymbol of consumer affiuen e, the American car of the
1950 , ha ceased to be an image of pleasure and freedom and has become
a concrete instrument of udden and irreparable injury. (In on! one picture of the period, Cars, doe an automobile appear intact.) D c the repetition of Five Deaths or a111rday Disaster cancel attention to the visible
angui h in the face of the living or the horror of the limp bodies of the
unconsciou and dead? We cannot penetrate beneath the image to touch
the true pain and grief, but their reality i sufficiently indicated in the photographs to force attention to one's limited abi lity to find an appropriate
re pon e.As for the repetition, m ight we just a. well understand it to mean
the grim predictability, day after day, of mo re events w ith an identical outcome, the leveling samene with which real, not symbolic, death erupts in
our experience?
In hi election of thee photograph, Warhol wa as little as ever the
passive receptor of commonly available imagery. Rather than relying upon
new paper reproductions that nlight have come to hand randomly, he
sought out glossy pre s agency print normally seen only by professional
57
58
Thoma~
Crow
Red Race Riot, 1963. Silkscreen ink on synthetic polymer paint on canvas, 137 x 82 :h in. Museum
Ludwig, Cologne.
59
60
Thomas Crow
demonstrations in the South; in the Race Riots of 1963, political life takes
on the same nightmare coloring that saturates so much of his other \vork.
We might take seriously, if only for a moment, Warhol's dictum that
in the future everyone will be famous for fifteen minutes, but conclude
that in his eyes it was likely to be under f:1irly horrifYing circumstances.
/ What this body of paintings adds up to is a kind ofpcilll11rc 11oirc in the sense
that we apply the term to the film 11oir genre of the 1940s and early 1950sa stark, disabused, pessimistic vision of American life, produced from the
knowing rearrangement of pulp materials by an artist who did not opt for
the easier paths of irony or condescension.
By 1965, of course, this episode in his work was largely over; the Floll'crs, Cow Wallpaper, silver pillows, and the like have little to do with the imagery under discussion here. Then the cliches began to ring true. But there
was for a time, in the work of 1961 to 1964, a threat to create a true "pop"
art in the most positive sense of that term-a pulp-derived, bleakly
monochrome vision that held, however tenuous the grip, to an all-butburied tradition of truth-telling in American commercial culture. Very
little of what is normally called pop art could make a similar claim. It remained, one could argue, a latency subsequently taken up by others, an international underground soon to be overground, who created the third
Warhol and the best one.
Discussion
\Vould it be possible, since Warhol was focusing in on celebrities. that his own growing celebrity status disillusioned him a great deal? I
ask this because a lot of the criticism of his work at the time these pictures
were introduced was not about what you've been talking about. You've
been talking about the sincerity and the horror and the.fi/111 110ir aspects of
his work, whereas a lot of the criticism of Warhol at the time that you're
referring to was about Warhol as a full person.
AUDIENCE
Yes, the game may have just worked so well ... though I
do see a lot of the things that he verbally claimed about his art to be a kind
of defense mechanism about their rather embarrassing elemental and sincere qualities. Of course, you can't underestimate the assassination attempt
either, in which all of this came true in his life. and the kind of fear. disillusionment, and pain-terrible lengthy pain-that caused him. That
would change anybody.
THOMAS CROW
AUDIENCE I'd like to ask you something to do with what you said about
Warhol's treatment of the subject of Marilyn, where the words that stuck
in my mind were "reverence" and "tact." Can you clarifY what you mean
by that? My reaction is to say that they are irreverent and tactless.
AUDIENCE
Do you really think there was a difference for Warhol between
Marilyn and what she symbolized?
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Thomas Crow
THOMAS CROW
Oh yes. absolutely. I think that Warhol sensed it. Biographical data is going to be no confirmation for this argument, but the
man had spent ten years in the fashion industry. in \vhich keeping your finger on the slightest seismic tremors having to do with stylistic signs and
distinctions is what you do to survive. And to think that he would be
producing Monroe as some univalent symbol of sexuality or of Hollywood seems to be at odds with everything one would expect from the man.
So I think that one starts to look for complications, and these are the ones
that I see in the image. I don't think that the Cold Marilyn is a mockery.
The image docs have something of the overpretty and of the slightly repellent character of an embalming, but that is our funerary ritual, isn't it?
I mean, in most of American life, that embalming, though it repels everyone, is still adhered to. That would be a way of constructing irreverence
too, in a way that would allow for its slightly perverse qualities. But they're
not images that are about pandering, except maybe the Lips. And, although
it's not an ironclad connection, I'm struck by the de Kooning parallel
there.
age and his public image coincide so well, then? And why has he been able
to sustain a life for more than twenty years like that. and an art practice
which, even if it is recuperated. is still of relatively good quality?
I should try to craft a kind of simple response to the complex of things that you raised. In one sense, I beg oft-dealing with the problem of Warhol's biography even by the standard I tried to set in the talk
itself. Which is to say that trying to think ofW.1rhol as a character, as a media personality, has been a trap for interpretation. As long as this kind of
thinking has gone on, the actual character of the work has been relatively
neglected. One thing that one has to say to all of this business of Monroe's
understanding that she was an image, and W.1rhol's being sensitive to this.
and so on, is that he didn't have to be all that sensitive to be able to use
those ideas: it was in Life magazine. There was a long interview. in f:lCt,
which happened by coincidence to be published the very week that she
died, in which she used her education of the last ten years or so to rclkct
on all of these issues. It was part of the culture; it wasn't something that the
artistic sophisticate had to supply to mass culture. It was there, and Warhol
was just interested in it and able to make some painting out of it.
THOMAS CROW
THOMAS CROW
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Thomas Crow
stuff was r<.:ally address<.:d, and l think that all of that was r<.:ally an issue on
th<.: scre<.:n, working and pr<.:s<.:nting th<.: images.
l n my r<.:ading of th<.: ]9(>0s, there is talk of how there was this tremendous barrage of imag<.:ry which people \ver<.: confronted with every day.
such as th<.: war, rae<.: riots, car crashes, and so or1. The result was a highly
intdl<.:ctual combat with television. So there \Vas this r<.:sulting desensitization, and that's why you g<.:t "hot" imagery that takes the form of images
like Marilyn. l just think that all of that is perhaps more of a sociological
ph<.:nom<.:non.
To m<.:, that just sounds lik<.: journalism that n<.:eds to be int<.:rrogated. To dicle things lik<.: racial clashes with car crashes, say, would b<.:
just to talk about th<.:m on one plan<.: as bt.:ing part of some imag<.: saturation. This s<.:<.:ms to b<.: very incurious about where such images come
from, and wh<.:r<.: they're most likdy to be taken seriously.
THOMAS CROW
The imag<.:s of car crashes ar<.: the stapl<.: of small-town journalism. They
are about local p<.:ople you might know, they are about very intimate forms
of disaster that can <.:rupt in a town.! rem<.:mber them from my own childhood as being something to which you were exposed all th<.: time. Maybe
you could try a macrosociological explanation that, with the great increase
in car ownership in the 1950s, cars that w<.:re just rolling death traps, no
saf<.:ty d<.:vic<.:s at all, people were really being killed, and it was an intimate
form of confrontation with terrible dang<.:r that was a part of everyday life.
It didn't have anything to do with the 1960s and some kind ofimage saturation; it was a localized and very modest kind of media phenomenon.
l don't know, do you all feel overwhelmed now? I mean, it's bound to
have gott<.:n worse in the meantime. Do you carry around this feeling that
your consciousness has been completely leveled by news of Lebanon, and
Nicaragua, and hijackings so that you can't think anymore? ... So that discriminations are impossible? Granted that it's a complicated thing, but you
can still think.
Notes
I. There arc as yet only fragmentary accounts of this phenomenon. For some preliminary
comment, sec lain Chambers, Urba11 Rhythms: Pop 1Husic aud Popular Culture (New York: St.
Martin's Press, 1985), pp. 130ff.
2. Sec, for example, Rainer Crone, A11dy J,Jic~rhol, trans. J. W. Gabriel (New York: Pracgcr,
1970), passim.
3. Sec. t"l>r example. Carter Ratclit{ .-l11dy ll ;nJr,,f (NcwYork:Abbcvilk Prt~~. I 9S3). p.1~sim.
For an illuminating discus~ion of the power and cfti:cts of thi~ view in \Vest Germany.~<'<'
Andreas Huysscn, "The Cultural Politics of Pop." .\'ell' Ca"'"" Cririq11e.< -1 ( \Vinter I 975):
77-98.
-1. Sec. t"l>r example. Robert Hughe~. "The Rise oft\ndy Warhol." in B. \Valli~. ,.,l., .-Ire .1/ier
.\l,>demi.<m (New York: New Museum ofContcmpor.1ry .'\rt: Boston: D. R. Godine. I'!S-1).
pp. -IS-57.
S.Andy Warhol, "\Vhat Is Pop Art?" interview by Gene Swenson .. -lrr .\'ell'.< 6:! (Nonmbcr
I 963): 26. \Varhol's assistant during the I 960s. Gt'rard Malanga. ofti:red this interprct.Hion
of the passage in an interview: "Wdl. Andy'~ always said ... he said ~omcwhcrc that he
thought of himself as apolitical. And if you remember reading that really good interview
with Andy by Gene Swenson in '63. in "-lrr .\'ell'.<, when Andy talks about c1pitali~m and
communism as really being the same thing and ~omcday t'wrybody will think .tlikt~wdl.
char:, a ,cry political statement to make even though it sounds wry apolitical. So. I think.
there was always a political undcrcurrcm to Andy's unconscious concern fix politics. or of
j.<ic] society for that matter." (Patrick S. Smith. l l";n/~t>l: C>lll't'l:<illi<>ll.< ,,b,>llC eire .-lrrisr (Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, I 988). p. 163.
6. Crone (A11dy l J'c~r/wl, p. 2-1) dates the beginning of the Monroe portraits in a discus~ion of
silkscrecn technique without mentioning the death. Ratclifti: (.l11dy Jl';lril<>l, p. l 17) datt'S the
first portrait~ to August in a brief chronolot.'Y appended to his text. also without mentioning Monroe's death in the same momh.
7. De Kooning titled one of his lH'IIwll series after her in 195-1. Norman Mailer's Etscination with the actress is rehearsed at length in Marily11," Bi<~emplry (New York: Grosset &
Dunlap. 1973). W.1rhol was himsdf f.1scinatcd by the aura that surroundtd tht arti~t~ of tht
tirst generation of the New York School and was calculatedly looking iiJr ways to mow into
their orbit. His interest in de Kooning. though no doubt real. has taktn on a spurious specificity based on remarks mistakenly appended to the 1963 Swenson interview when it was
reprinted in john Russell and Suzi Gablik. Pop Art R<de/i11ed (NtwYork: l'racgcr. 196'!). The
statement (p. 188), "de Kooning gave me my content and my moti,ation," actually comts
from Swenson's interview with Tom Wessdmann (sec Arc Nell'.< 62 !February ll)(>-1]: (>-1).
Like others. I had given credence to this scholarly virus in the past. The record was publicly
corrected by Barry Blindcrman (letter to the cditor,Arr itu-!maica75j0ctobcr 1987]: 21).
The misattribution has, however. reappeared in the catalogue of the Museum of Modern
Art exhibition. All!!)' H1lrlwl: A Rctrospcctil'c (New York: Museum of Modern Art: Boston:
distributed by Bullfinch Press/Little, Brown. 1989), pp. 18. 23n.
8. The print, from a photograph by Gene Kornman. was uncovered in tht archives of the
Warhol estate by the organizers of ;l11dy JVarh,>l: A Rctro.<pectil't' (an illustration of the print
with Warhol's markings appears on p. 72).13cforc it had come to light, I had surmistd that
he had used a portion of the color f.1ec portrait in a composite image. basing that conjecture on the seemingly identical aspect of the hair in that photograph and in the Warhol
screen (sec my comments and an illustration of the other portrait in llrt i11 Amaic,, 75 jMay
1987]: 130). I am grateful to Jennifer Wells of the department of painting at the Museum of
Modern Art for her knowledge and assistance on this and other points.
'!.Sec Crone, Audy H11rhol, p. 24, who dates Warhol's commitment to the technique to August I '!62. The first screened portraits. he states, were of Troy Donahue. Marco Livingston
("Do It Yourself: Notes on Warhol's Techniques," in A11dy J,lfc~r/wl:A Rctn>spcctil'e, p. 69) states
that Baseball (Nelson-Atkins Museum. Kansas City) was among the very tarlicst, along with
Disasters on both paper and canvas, such as Suicide (Adelaide de Mcnil Collection).
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Thomas Crow
I fl. Sec, for example. /!11dy li'.1Tiwl IGn:enwich. Conn.: New York Graphic Society. I '170), p.
52. The so urn: of IIJO't of the photographs was Lift' 55 (November 2'1. I %3): 22.31; (lkccmbcr (,,I %3): 43, 4H.
l I. Sec interview with Gerard Malanga in Smith. l!'.11hol: Comns,l/iOIIS ,,bout rhr .-Jrti.<t. p.
1(>3.
12. This control. of course, could take the form of undemanding and anticipating the characteristic imperfections and distortions of the process; that is. ofknowingjust how little one
had to intervene once the l)Jsic arrangement. screen pattern. and color choices had been decided. !'or a firsthand account, sec the illuminating if somewhat self-contradictory comments of Gerard Malanga in Patrick S. Smith. A11dy l!'tzrhol:< Art a11d Films (Ann Arbor: UMI
Research l'rcss, 1'lflr,). pp. 3'11-3'J2, 3'1H-400. Sec also Livingston's remarks ("Do It Yourself." p. 72) on the ways in which the rephotographed full-sized acetate would be altered by
the artist ("for example, to increase the wnal contrast by removing areas ofhalf-tone, thereby
further flattening the image") before its transfer to silkscrccn, as well as on the subsequent
me of the ;a me acetate to plot and mark the intended placement of the screen impressions
before the process of printing began. Warhol's remarks in a conversation with Malanga indicate a habit of careful premeditation; he explains how the location of an impression was
established if color was to be applied under it: "Silhouette shapes of the actual image were
painted in by isolating the rest of an area on the canvas by means of masking tape. Afterwards, when the paint dried. the masking tape would be removed and the silk screen would
be placed on top of the painted silhouette shape. sometimes slightly off register." Pri11t Collector's Newsletter 1 (January/February 1'171): 126.
13. For a summary of press accounts of the affair, sec Roger E. Schwed, Abolitio11 a11d Capitall'u11isl1111c11t:'l1nlJnitcd Statcs'judicial, Political and Moral Barometer (NewYork:AMS Press.
I 'IH3), pp. oH-1 04.