A collection of Warhol related magazines, books and records
14 magazines, "Interview", 1973-78. One of them signed by Andy Warhol with black pen.
One magazine "New York, 1987 with Andy Warhol on the cover.
Book, "POPism", 1980, signed with a dedication 'to Bo and Tina, Love Andy Warhol", also signed with black pen on dust cover.
Exhibition cataloge, Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 1970 (Third edition).
Book, "Andy Warhol" by John Coplans.
Book "Andy Warhol's Exposures".
8 books, Wayne Oestenbaum - "Porträtt" (2 copies), 2002, Andy Warhol - "A - a novel by Andy Warhol", 1968, Peter Gidal "Andy Warhol - films and paintings", 1971 (2 copies), John Coplans - "Andy Warhol", 1971, "Andy Warhol's Exposure", 1979, "The Warhol Look", 1997. "Andy Warhol - transcript of David Bailey's ATV Documentary".
One paper bag with "Cow" cover, from the MOMA retrospective exhibition 1989.
Two vinyl records, "Andy Warhol's Velvet Underground featuring Nico", german later pressing.
Tina & Bo Sederowsky Collection.
American artist, printmaker, and filmmaker. He studied at the Carnegie Institute of Technology from 1945 to 1949 and began his career as an art director for the magazines Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar. His success in the advertising industry led to the Art Directors Club Medal in 1957.
Warhol is considered one of the leading figures of Pop Art. His artistic practice consists largely of portraits, often of well-known individuals, executed in silkscreen technique. He also worked with reproduced documentary images as well as installations in which everyday consumer objects, such as packaging, were given a central role. The underlying idea was that beauty and energy can be found everywhere in modern society, even in things often regarded as banal. As a result, detergent boxes and soup cans became artistic motifs. Campbell’s soup cans and Brillo boxes were transformed through his work into some of the most iconic artworks of the 20th century.
From 1963 onward, he produced and participated in a large number of films in his own studio, The Factory, which simultaneously developed into an important meeting place for New York’s artistic and bohemian scene. Warhol continuously documented his surroundings with a film camera and later also a Polaroid camera. In his so-called Screen Tests, he filmed a number of internationally known figures, including Mick Jagger, Bob Dylan, Marcel Duchamp, and Salvador Dalí. According to his will, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts was established in New York in 1987, and in 1994 The Andy Warhol Museum opened in Pittsburgh.
Read moreThe artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.