Warhol in New York: a fresh experience

His Marilyn Monroe paintings and oversize soup cans are cultural icons, but in an exhibition opening Monday, 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 of vibrant, repetitive
screen printing, it also presents Warhol as far from a one-trick 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.

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