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[THEME MUSIC]
A few days ago, the Supreme Court tried to answer a question that has long bedeviled the world of art. When is borrowing from an earlier artist an act of inspiration and when is it theft? Today, Adam Liptak on the case that could change how art is made.
It’s Tuesday, May 23.
Adam, if you’ll just indulge me for a moment, how would you describe your relationship to fine art?
I’m a dilettante. My wife takes me to a lot of museums. I try to be a cultured person.
That’s noble. And what are your specific thoughts about Andy Warhol?
You know, Warhol is so present in the popular culture even though much of what he does is appropriate and comment on the culture of celebrity.
Even though, if I’m reading between the lines, not everyone, including you, even agrees that everything Warhol does is art. And just to give you my perspective on this, my experience with it, Warhol for me is a bath book that I read to my son Ash. If you get the pages wet, the pieces of art in the book, the Brillo pad boxes, the Campbell’s Soup cans, they turn a different shade of color. I mean, this is how ubiquitous Andy Warhol has become. He is in the bathtub.
Right. And museums around the world display his work, and it’s worth cumulatively hundreds of millions, if not a billion dollars.
Right. And the reason we’re talking to you about Warhol is not because we’re here to debate the relative merits or valuations of his pieces but because he is the subject of a pretty important Supreme Court ruling, one that came down a few days ago and that I think got a little bit lost in the shuffle of the news. So tell us about that case.
So you know, Michael, we often talk about the blockbuster cases involving huge social issues — abortion, affirmative action, gay rights, religion. But the court also can issue quite important, consequential decisions about all kinds of areas of American life. And this case that came down a couple of days ago involves a quite large question about what artists can do and how much they can make use of, draw on, engage in a conversation with earlier works or whether that crosses a line of copyright infringement.
In other words, the Supreme Court weighed in on when is art appropriation, when is it honorary borrowing, when is it theft.
Right. Or when is it such a transformation that it’s created something wholly new or protectable in its own right.
And where does this case, Adam, begin?
It starts in 1981 when the rock musician Prince is starting to get famous.
- archived recording (prince)
(SINGING) Controversy. Do I believe in God?
His album “Controversy” comes out.
- archived recording (prince)
(SINGING) Controversy.
He hosts “Saturday Night Live.”
- archived recording
And now here’s Prince.
- archived recording (prince)
Partyup! 1, 2, 3.
And a prominent rock photographer Lynn Goldsmith thinks it’s time to get some photographs with him. She gets a commission from Newsweek magazine. She takes some concert photos and some portraits.
- archived recording (prince)
(SINGING) We don’t want to fight no more.
And one portrait in particular, which will be at the center of this case, black and white, shows Prince kind of ill at ease, vulnerable. It’s a striking photograph of a young rock musician.
Mm-hmm.
A couple of years later, 1984 —
- archived recording (prince)
(SINGING) Purple rain, purple rain.
— Prince is turning into a superstar. His album “Purple Rain” is coming out.
- archived recording (prince)
(SINGING) Purple rain, purple rain.
And Vanity Fair wants to do an article on him and asks Andy Warhol, the very prominent artist, to illustrate it.
- archived recording (prince)
(SINGING) Only wanted to see you bathing in the purple rain.
And they obtained for Warhol one of Lynn Goldsmith’s portraits as an artist’s reference, and they pay her $400 and tell her they will use it once. And Warhol gets to work and alters the photograph. He kind of crops it. He colors it purple. He sort of shades Prince’s eyes. And it’s a very different looking kind of disembodied head that art critics say is not that kind of lonely, ill at ease portrait of Prince but is a kind of view of modern celebrity, or so the art critics say. So Vanity Fair publishes that silkscreen image by Warhol based on the Goldsmith photo.
Mm-hmm.
Warhol also goes off and creates 15 other variations on the Goldsmith photo. And this is common with Warhol. He will do various versions of photos of celebrities.
Right, the Marilyns, et cetera.
Right. And then when Warhol dies in 1987, those images and all of his other artwork and all of the copyrights in them go to the Andy Warhol Foundation for Visual Arts. Then in 2016, Prince himself dies, and Vanity Fair’s his parent company Conde Nast puts together a special magazine celebrating Prince’s life, and it wants to find a cover image.
And it goes to the Annie Warhol Foundation and said, what do you got? And they take a different image from this series and put it on the cover and pay the foundation $10,000, and Lynn Goldsmith gets no money and no credit. And when she becomes aware of this use of her work, she says, wait a second, that’s copyright infringement. You’re not allowed to do that.
And what does the Warhol Foundation have to say about that?
The Warhol Foundation launches a lawsuit.
Huh. And what is their rationale for filing a lawsuit and making that argument? Because they could just have paid her off, right?
We’re not privy to the settlement negotiations, but the argument — the Warhol Foundation’s lawyers said that Goldsmith had asked for a quite substantial seven figure sum. But the lawsuit also has a larger purpose, and it’s a purpose that the Warhol Foundation has to care deeply about because it goes to the heart of Warhol’s work. And they want to make the case that under the copyright laws and under the so-called fair use exception to copyright infringement, it’s important to create some space for later artists to make use of earlier works.
Mm-hmm.
So the Warhol Foundation is trying to make a point about the need to protect artistic expression that builds on, appropriates, and transforms earlier works.
Right. So for the Warhol Foundation, this is not about one payment, one lawsuit, one anything. This is a more existential question of whether an artist like Warhol gets to practice their craft, which involves borrowing and appropriating on a pretty large scale.
That’s right. And the court has looked at this question in a slightly different context before.
In 1994, in a case involving the rap group 2 Live Crew and Roy Orbison, one of the founding fathers of rock and roll —
(SINGING) Pretty woman walking down the street. Pretty woman, the kind I like to meet.
— 2 Live Crew wanted to have some fun with the Roy Orbison hit “Pretty Woman.”
And substitute other characters for pretty woman.
- archived recording (2 live crew)
(SINGING) Big hairy woman, you need to shave that stuff. Big hairy woman.
Like big hairy woman.
Right, and two-timin’ woman. I know the song. [LAUGHS]
The owners of those rights of the Orbison song flatly said, no, we don’t want to be involved in a parody that transforms a pretty woman into a hairy woman. No thank you.
- archived recording (2 live crew)
Oh, pretty woman.
2 Live Crew does it anyway, takes its chances, has a big hit. They get sued. And the Supreme Court said, well, if it’s parody, that’s in the nature of fair use that comment, criticism, parody gets protected because otherwise you couldn’t do it at all.
Got it. So from where the Warhol Foundation sits, it looks like a very big and very important precedent case that it can call upon, and its dispute with Lynn Goldsmith would seem to favor Warhol’s approach to art, which is cumulative. It is borrowish. It is what 2 Live Crew did to Roy Orbison.
So that’s mostly right, although there may be a key distinction. Where 2 Live Crew is engaging with and commenting on the earlier work, it’s not clear that Warhol is saying anything about the Goldsmith photo. He’s using it, yes, but is he actually engaging with it? Is he actually saying something about it? Or could he just have easily gone to any other photograph of Prince to do his Warhol number on that photograph?
So there’s some real gray area in this Warhol lawsuit. So tell us about the oral arguments in this case once it hits the nine justices of the Supreme Court.
- archived recording
We will hear argument first this morning in case number 21-869. Andy Warhol Foundation versus Goldsmith. Mr. Martinez?
- archived recording (roman martinez)
Mr. Chief Justice and may it please the court.
So the lawyer for the Warhol Foundation Roman Martinez makes two basic points, one focused and one quite large.
- archived recording (roman martinez)
Warhol’s print series can reasonably be perceived to convey a fundamentally different meaning or message from Goldsmith’s photograph. The question in this case —
The focused argument is that he maintains that all you need to do is look at the Warhol piece and you will see that it conveys a fundamentally different message, that its meaning is different from the photograph, and that it should be protected for that reason.
Mm-hmm.
- archived recording (roman martinez)
Finally, the stakes for artistic expression in this case are high.
His larger point is that it’s not about one image of Prince. It’s about the nature of how art works.
- archived recording (roman martinez)
A ruling for Goldsmith would strip protection not just from this print series but from countless works of modern and contemporary art.
And that lots of visual and other kinds of art, music, literature works because the later work is building on, commenting on in dialogue with the earlier work.
- archived recording (roman martinez)
It would make it illegal for artists, museums, galleries, and collectors to display, sell, profit from, maybe even possess a significant quantity of works. It would also —
And for the Supreme Court to say that the copyright law is so rigid that it doesn’t allow for that kind of expression would do grave damage to the artistic community.
Not just damage to Warhol but basically to any artist who does what Warhol does, of which there are thousands.
Yes, certainly visual art, but also all kinds of art.
And what about the other side, Adam? What do lawyers for Lynn Goldsmith tell the justices?
- archived recording (lisa blatt)
Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice and may it please the court. Fair use is —
Goldsmith’s lawyer Lisa Blatt says the question isn’t whether Warhol was a genius or an artist. The question was whether he or his foundation should have paid Goldsmith when he built on her work, that there should be no kind of Warhol exception for this genius.
- archived recording (lisa blatt)
Petitioner responds Warhol is a creative genius who imbued other people’s art with his own distinctive style. But Spielberg did the same for films and Jimi Hendrix for music. Those giants still needed licenses.
She had this nice phrase — copyrights will be at the mercy of copycats if the court rules for Warhol.
- archived recording (lisa blatt)
Anyone could turn Darth Vader into a hero or spin off “All in the Family” into “The Jeffersons” without paying the creators a dime. I welcome your questions.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
So both sides seem to be making the most extreme arguments they can think of. And the justices, as they weigh in on the case, also seem to be staking out quite extreme positions.
We’ll be right back.
So Adam, during the oral arguments in this case, what do the justices have to say about Warhol, Goldsmith, and the merits of this case?
There are basically two schools of thought. A couple of the justices, and they’re not typically allies, really seem to be taken by the quality of Warhol’s art and suggest that at least when we’re talking about Andy Warhol you really ought to let him have some room to maneuver.
Hmm. Which justices?
Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Kagan.
- archived recording (chief justice john roberts)
Ms. Blatt, you said that the only thing that’s different was the distinctive style of Warhol. I think your friend’s point is broader than that.
Roberts completely buys in to the idea that Warhol is sending a different message.
- archived recording (chief justice john roberts)
It’s not just that Warhol has a different style. It’s that unlike Goldsmith’s photograph, Warhol sends a message about the depersonalization of modern culture and celebrity status. So it’s not just a different style. It’s a different purpose. One is the commentary on modern society. The other is to show what Prince looks like.
And Kagan, in slightly more colloquial terms, asks the question of how come museums all over the world have Warhols in them?
- archived recording (justice elena kagan)
The point is, why do museums show Andy Warhol? They show Andy Warhol because he was a transformative artist, because he took a bunch of photographs and he made them mean something completely different. And people look at Elvis and people look at Marilyn Monroe or Elizabeth Taylor and Prince and they say, this has an entirely different message from the thing that started it all off.
That suggests that the answer to the question in the case, at least in the case of Warhol, she says, is that he ought to be protected.
So what Roberts and Kagan are communicating here, besides the fact that they seem to have taken art history in college and want everyone to know it, is that Warhol’s take on the original Prince photo is not at all a copycat. And that’s legally meaningful here given the precedence and given the nature of the case.
Right. And other justices spoke in less highfalutin terms and were more skeptical of the Warhol Foundation’s arguments. And Justice Alito, for instance, asked —
- archived recording (justice samuel alito)
How is a court to determine the purpose or meaning of works of art, like a photograph or a painting?
How am I supposed to decide what the meaning of an artwork is? That’s not what I learned in law school.
Mm-hmm.
And the lawyer for the Warhol Foundation says, well, let’s look at the 2 Live Crew case.
- archived recording (roman martinez)
One of the issues in the case was whether the 2 Live Crew song was, in fact, a parody. And in order to do that, the court needed to assess what the meaning or message of the work was. So I think you could just look at the two works and figure out what you think.
He says, back then, the court looked at the song and decided it had a meaning that was distinct from but transformed the Roy Orbison song, and that’s judicial work.
Mm-hmm.
- archived recording (justice samuel alito)
You make it sound simple, but maybe it’s not so simple, at least in some cases, to determine what is the meaning or the message of a work of art. There can be a lot of dispute about what the meaning or the message is.
And Alito says, you make it sound easy, but I’m not sure we’re really up to the job.
Mm. So Alito is saying, I’m not comfortable declaring this to be such a transformation of the original artwork that I can sympathize with Warhol the way Kagan and Roberts have.
That’s right. And other justices also hostile to the Warhol Foundation, like Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Neil Gorsuch, are focused on the practical questions in the case, the particular transactions between Vanity Fair and Conde Nast.
Mm-hmm. And what does Sotomayor have to say?
- archived recording (justice sonia sotomayor)
The specific use was of this one part of the Prince series, only one level of it, as a photograph in the life of Prince. Now, that use can — you say on factor four that it doesn’t compete with Goldsmith’s photograph, but it’s hard to see how not.
Sotomayor says, what’s really at issue here is a narrow marketplace.
- archived recording (justice sonia sotomayor)
They both sell photographs to magazines and they both sell photographs of magazines to display Prince’s vision or Prince’s look.
(Video) The Supreme Court to decide whether Andy Warhol violated copyright law
It’s the marketplace of selling pictures of prints to magazines. And you can argue about all kinds of other uses of what Warhol can do and can’t do. But if Lynn Goldsmith can sell photographs of prints to magazines and Andy Warhol is selling a photograph of prints created by Lynn Goldsmith with some Warhol stuff on top of it to magazines, that, she says, is too close for comfort. That, she says, is what copyright is meant to protect — your opportunity to sell your work in the same marketplace as the other guy.
Hmm. In other words, they’re both taking water out of the same well. And she isn’t worried about some grand artistic idea. Sotomayor is saying that Warhol has borrowed from a Goldsmith photo, sold to a magazine, and then used a derivative piece of art to kind of muscle his way back into that same magazine marketplace. And thereby he’s basically stealing food from her table.
That’s right. So by the end of the argument, it seemed that a majority — maybe a lopsided majority — of the court was prepared to rule for Goldsmith.
OK, so walk us through the ultimate ruling in this case.
So in the end, the ruling was 7 to 2 in favor of Goldsmith. Justice Sotomayor writes the majority opinion, and it kind of tracks her questioning at the argument, which focused on whether the Warhol Foundation was required to pay a fee to Goldsmith at least in the context of licensing images to magazines. If you’re selling pictures of prints to magazines and you’re in the same lane as the photographer whose work you were drawing on, you have an obligation under the copyright laws to compensate her.
Mm-hmm.
She says to hold otherwise would potentially authorize a range of commercial copying of photographs to be used for purposes that are substantially the same as those of the originals.
So the majority’s ruling here is that this is ultimately a kind of small-scale copyright infringement, and Warhol owes Goldsmith money. But I’m struck by the language that Sotomayor uses — “substantially the same.” She’s kind of taking the position that what Warhol did wasn’t ultimately all that transformational of Goldsmith’s original photograph.
That’s right. And she’s called out on that by the two dissenters, Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kagan, that Sotomayor really minimizes what Warhol has done here. And Justice Kagan, who wrote the dissent, was quite slashing in criticizing what she viewed as a failure of imagination or taste or something by the majority.
She wrote, “The majority does not see it, and I mean that literally. There is precious little evidence in today’s opinion that the majority has actually looked at these images, much less than it has engaged with expert views of their aesthetics and meaning.” Kagan also — she says the majority decision will “stifle” creativity of every sort. It will impede new art and music and literature. It will thwart the expression of new ideas and the attainment of new knowledge. It will make our world poorer.” So just as the majority tries to make the case small, the dissent says it’s huge.
Well, let’s interrogate that prediction from Justice Kagan. What does this ruling mean for the world of art? If Kagan and Roberts are to be believed from that dissent, it will have a lasting and quite negative impact.
My understanding is it’s too soon to tell. The majority certainly tried to write it in a small and focused way, concentrating on commercial transactions in the same lane. But almost all of art consists of commercial transactions. And what the impact of the decision will be will turn on whether the original artists and the later artists are working in the same lane. And we don’t know yet how broad those lanes are.
Or how narrow those lanes are.
Right. So think about it this way. Hanging one of the Prince series images in a museum, probably not the same commercial lane. But what about the postcard in the gift shop? A postcard of one of these Prince images that’s hanging in the museum. The museum may well also have postcards of Lynn Goldsmith’s work. She’s a noted prominent rock photographer. Does that mean that in that setting we’re also, again, in the same lane and Goldsmith is entitled to a cut of the Warhol postcard?
Hmm. By the legal test set up by the majority, it seems that it would.
You would think so, yeah.
And the dissenters are saying that is a can of worms you don’t want to open.
Right. The dissenters say it will affect not only visual artists but writers and musicians and film makers. And some of them will try to license the underlying work that they want to build on and won’t be able to afford that license fee or maybe will be told that the underlying work’s owner is not interested in licensing something.
And some others are going to think, I would like to create new art that draws on old art, but I’m scared and I’m going to go do something else instead. So there is good reason to think that Justice Kagan’s dissent might be a little overblown. But at least at the margins it might stifle some valuable artwork.
But of course, there’s another way to see this outcome, Adam, which is that a new generation of artists born into the aftermath of a ruling like this sees borrowing from previous artists as too risky and it unleashes a wave of original creative art and music and literature that is not as reliant on everyone and everything from the past. I would call that the glass half full interpretation of the Supreme Court case.
Right. That is a very nice, optimistic idea that’s at odds with millennia of experience of how art works.
[LAUGHS]: Well, Adam, at the risk of being very derivative of what I say at the end of every episode, thank you very much.
Thank you, Michael.
[MUSIC PLAYING]
We’ll be right back.
Here’s what else you need to know today. With just days left before the US hits the debt ceiling and can no longer pay its bills, negotiators for Democrats and Republicans are increasingly focused on the idea of spending caps which would limit future spending as the basis for a deal that would raise the debt ceiling and end the crisis.
Such spending caps, if agreed to by both sides, would allow Republicans to claim they have won spending concessions from Democrats and allow Democrats to argue they’re being fiscally responsible without letting Republicans slash spending on cherished domestic programs. Without a deal, the United States will hit the debt ceiling next week.
And on Monday, the European Union fined Meta, the parent company of Facebook, $1.3 billion and ordered the company to stop transferring data collected in Europe to the United States. The EU found that Meta had failed to comply with a 2020 ruling that European data shipped to the US was not sufficiently protected from American spy agencies. Meta said it will appeal the fine.
Today’s episode was produced by Rob Szypko, Diana Nguyen, and Sydney Harper. It was edited by John Ketchum and MJ Davis Lin, contains original music by Dan Powell and Elisheba Ittoop, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk of Wonderly.
That’s it for “The Daily.” And just a reminder, all this week you’re going to see our new show “The Headlines” right here in “The Daily” feed. We made it for you. I hope you like it. To find it, go to nytimes.com/AudioApp. I’m Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.
FAQs
What was the Supreme Court decision on Warhol? ›
The decision noted that the court had “no opinion as to the creation, display, or sale of any of the original Prince Series works.” It also stated that Warhol's famous “Campbell Soup Can” works are fair use, because they differ in purpose from the original imagery, which was used to advertised soup.
Did Andy Warhol violate copyright law? ›The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that the 2016 publication of an Andy Warhol image of the singer Prince violated a photographer's copyright, a decision a dissenting justice said would stifle the creation of art.
What did the appeals court rule in Andy Warhol Foundation v Lynn Goldsmith? ›At issue was the Prince Series created by Andy Warhol based on a photograph of the musician Prince by Lynn Goldsmith. It held Warhol's changes were insufficiently transformative to fall within fair use, resolving an issue arising from a circuit split between the Second and Ninth Circuits among others.
What are the differences between Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein? ›Lichtenstein and Warhol adopted very different approaches when appropriating the imagery of Expressionism: Lichtenstein considered the principles and aesthetic of the movement as a whole, whilst Warhol concentrated on the work of a single artist.
Who owns Andy Warhol rights? ›A: The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, PA, owns and controls the copyrights to Andy Warhol's films and videos.
Who bought the Marilyn Monroe Andy Warhol? ›Like Warhol and Monroe, the buyer, art dealer Larry Gagosian, is also a familiar face.
Why was Andy Warhol criticized? ›Although highly praised by many, Warhol's work and legacy are controversial due to questions of whether his work can be considered art or a product. Warhol is also criticized by some groups for being an alleged artistic fraud and anti-feminist, tarnishing his reputation decades after his death in 1987.
Was Andy Warhol exploitative? ›Warhol has been accused of exploiting his filmic subjects. Mostly he paid them in fleeting fame rather than cash.
What art is not protected by copyright? ›This means that ancient works (sculptures, paintings) such as Da Vinci's, Géricault's or Rembrandt's works are no longer protected by copyright – they are said to be part of the public domain. Accordingly, you are free to reproduce them.
What is one of the most famous works of appropriation that is created by Andy Warhol? ›Andy Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans
A firm believer that art should belong to the masses, Warhol's appropriation art helped to define Pop Art as a movement, and in turn became a frequent target of appropriation artists himself.
What were 3 of the magazines that wanted to make use of Andy Warhols designs and illustrations? ›
After studying art at college, Warhol went on to become a sought-after illustrator for fashion magazines like Vogue, Harpers Bazaar, and Glamour.
What one of the most famous works of appropriation would have to be Andy Warhol's on 1962? ›Andy Warhol famously appropriated familiar images from consumer culture and mass media, among them celebrity and tabloid news photographs, comic strips, and, in this work, the widely consumed canned soup made by the Campbell's Soup Company.
Who was the most famous Pop Art artists besides Andy Warhol? ›- Andy Warhol (1928-1987) ...
- Keith Haring (1958-1990) ...
- Roy Lichtenstein (1923-1997) ...
- Tom Wesselmann (1931-2004) ...
- Mimmo Rotella (1918-2006) ...
- Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) ...
- Richard Hamilton (1922-2011) ...
- James Rosenquist (1933-2017)
Shot Sage Blue Marilyn (1964)
Warhol's Shot Sage Blue Marilyn, is one of the artist's most notorious artworks of all time. The Mona Lisa of the 20th Century, Warhol's paintings of Marilyn Monroe are the ultimate Pop Art testament to celebrity, fame and beauty.
Warhol's use of images from popular culture has made him one of the best known pop artists. His work has a flat, graphic quality similar to that found in media and advertising.
Who inherited Andy Warhol's money? ›The question of who inherited Andy Warhol's estate has a simple answer. When the famed pop artist died in 1987, his estate went toward the formation of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Why is Andy Warhol painting so expensive? ›Today, Warhol's works, which include some of the most expensive paintings ever sold, are highly collectable and valuable. Why has Warhol achieved higher and higher prices even though he created a huge body of work? The art market is counterintuitive, so a large supply leads to high prices.
Who owns the most Warhols? ›Jose Mugrabi (born 1939) is a Syrian Israeli businessman and art collector. with a family net worth estimated at several billion. He is the leading collector of Andy Warhol, with 800 artworks.
What is Andy Warhol's most expensive piece? ›The Shot Sage Blue Marilyn by American art icon Andy Warhol, became the most expensive of all his paintings, when it was sold at a Christie's auction in New York for USD 195 million.
How much is Andy Warhol Marilyn Monroe worth? ›NEW YORK (AP) — Andy Warhol's “Shot Sage Blue Marilyn” sold for a cool $195 million on Monday, making the iconic portrait of Marilyn Monroe the most expensive work by a U.S. artist ever sold at auction.
How much did the Andy Warhol picture of Marilyn Monroe sell for? ›
Ahead of the auction, Christie's wrote that the painting is "one of the rarest and most transcendent images in existence", with a selling price "in the region" of $200m. The auction ended with a sale price of $170m, which rose to $195m with taxes and fees taken into account.
Why did Warhol stop painting? ›Although Warhol would continue to create paintings intermittently throughout his career, in 1965 he "retired" from the medium to concentrate on making experimental films.
How did Andy Warhol make money? ›Eventually, Warhol screen-printed images of soup cans, newspaper stories, celebrities, Coca-Cola bottles, and made a new way of expression, called Pop art. Turning the everyday into art (as opposed to elitist subjects), Warhol quickly earned a significant fan base and started making a profit out of his art.
Was Andy Warhol poor as a child? ›Born in 1928, Andy – who later in life would drop the final "a" from his last name – lived what his brothers would call a "spoiled" childhood, despite the fact that the family was poor.
Did Andy Warhol grow up rich or poor? ›“But when he talked about his background, he was pretty clear… that his father was a working man who died from the hardship of his job, and that he was raised in poverty and that his mother sold tin-canned artworks door-to-door.”
What is the most stolen work of copyrighted art? ›Throughout six centuries, the Ghent Altarpiece, also called “The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb,” has been burned, forged, and raided in three different wars. It is, in fact, the world's most stolen artwork— and is considered one of the most influential paintings ever made. What exactly makes the piece so special?
Can you get sued for copying an art style? ›It is legal to copy anything. It is illegal to sell, publicize and publish a copy of an artwork unless you have prior permission from the copyright owner. It is also illegal to publish and sell an artwork that's substantially similar to another original work of art.
What is the most protected artwork? ›Mona Lisa
Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci has long been attracting vandals and is currently one of the best-protected artworks in the world.
Although Warhol is strongly linked with the Pop Art movement, he truly believed that art should not be defined by a time or concept- but rather that art should create a new feeling and movement every time.
What style is Andy Warhol known for? ›In 1960, Warhol turned his attention to the pop art movement, which began in Britain in the mid-1950s. Everyday life inspired pop artists, and their source material became mass-produced products and commercial artifacts of daily life; commercial products entered into the highly valued fine art space.
Is art appropriation a form of forgery? ›
She suggests that the distinction lies in simply whether the work was made with the intention of being a forgery or a work of art. [9] Thus, this implies that the distinction between forgery and appropriation art is subjective in nature but ultimately lies in intent and transparency.
What piece of art made Andy Warhol famous? ›Campbell's Soup Cans (1961-2)
The Campbell's Soup series — comprised of 32 individual canvases, each dedicated to a different flavour offered by the company — is essentially responsible for catapulting Warhol, and the Pop Art movement he founded, to stardom.
Kazimir Malevich (1879 – 1935)
Through this radical experiment, Malevich produced some truly iconic Suprematism paintings. Out of his works, Black Square (1915), Suprematist Painting, Eight Red Rectangles (1915), Suprematist Composition (1916), and White Square on White (1917 – 1918) exist as his most notable.
Printmaking appealed to Warhol as it allowed him to repeat a basic image and create endless variations of it by using different colours or sometimes adding paint to the printed surface.
What did Warhol decide to do to be famous? ›Warhol went on to become an illustrator for Glamour magazine, which placed him as a leading figure in the 1950s Pop Art movement. His aesthetic was a unique convergence of fine art mediums such as photography and drawing with highly commercialized components revolving around household brand and celebrity names.
What did Andy Warhol think about celebrities? ›The trick of celebrity is to feel that we are up close. Warhol the portrait painter understood celebrity better than anyone because he understood it as a brand. The photographs and screen prints are tantalizing in what they simultaneously offer and withhold.
What are two famous individuals people featured in Warhol's artwork? ›These new works join the ranks of his most iconic portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Elizabeth Taylor, Jackie O, Debbie Harry and John Wayne.
What happened to Andy Warhol's money? ›The question of who inherited Andy Warhol's estate has a simple answer. When the famed pop artist died in 1987, his estate went toward the formation of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
Why did Andy Warhol choose Marilyn Monroe? ›Andy Warhol made his original Marilyn Monroe painting in 1962. The actress died on 5 August 1962 after taking an overdose of sleeping pills. The news of her death inspired Warhol to create his first Marilyn silkscreen paintings later that month.
Why did Warhol paint race riot? ›Birmingham Race Riot seems full of political significance with its highly charged black-and-white depiction of a pivotal period in American history. However, Warhol has said that he did not seek to engage in political commentary with the image; he simply chose to represent an image that caught his eye.
Why did Andy Warhol paint endangered? ›
The Andy Warhol Endangered Species portfolio was commissioned by the art dealers Ronald and Frayda Feldman. The idea for the portfolio was born after conversations they had with Warhol about ecological issues, including beach erosion.
Who owns the most Andy Warhol? ›ollywood, Calif., Aug. 5 -- Marilyn Monroe, one of the most famous stars in Hollywood's history, was found dead early today in the bedroom of her home in the Brentwood section of Los Angeles. She was 36 years old. Beside the bed was an empty bottle that had contained sleeping pills.
Did Andy Warhol ever meet Marilyn? ›Though he never met her, it is unsurprising that Warhol decided to depict Marilyn Monroe after her suicide in 1962, quickly becoming enamoured with her as a subject.
How much is Andy Warhol Marilyn worth? ›Warhol's portrait of Marilyn Monroe sells for $195 million, most for any U.S. artist.
Was Andy Warhol bullied? ›Warhol was bullied for being a shy, awkward child, which led to his journey of self-transformation. “He felt that he was unattractive. He struggled with his skin, with his bulbous nose.
Why is Warhol so important? ›Andy Warhol wasn't just influential; he created a whole new genre of contemporary art – pop art. “During the 1960's, consumerism and commercialism in America had taken over the nation. Warhol reacted to the assault of advertisements and popular figures by illustrating these trends in his artwork.
What serious disease did Andy Warhol have? ›As a child, Warhol suffered from Sydenham chorea, a neurological disorder commonly known as St. Vitus dance, characterized by involuntary movements. When the disorder occasionally kept him home from school, Warhol would read comics and Hollywood magazines and play with paper cutouts.
What disability did Andy Warhol have? ›Andy Warhol
Influential pop artist Andy Warhol's love of repetition is an iconic feature of his style. His pattern of repetition defined an entire era of art, and it may have been the case that Warhol's affinity for repetition was a symptom of Asperger's.
On June 3, 1968, Solanas showed up to Warhol's office at 33 Union Square West, and shot Warhol and Mario Amaya, a London art gallery owner. She committed this violent attack on Warhol because of the outrage she felt after her offer was rejected by the artist.