Ei yhteyttä palvelimeen
10. huhti 2026

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol, Scandinavian Beauty II

As a portrait painter, Andy Warhol occupies a unique position in the history of postwar art. During the 1970s, he further developed his celebrated “society portraits”- images depicting the celebrities of the era and transforming them into stylized, timeless icons.

“Everyone became a star, not just for fifteen minutes, but, through this incarnation captured on canvas, forever.”* In the autumn of 1976, a strikingly beautiful Swedish woman caught Warhol’s attention, and the following year two completed canvases were sent from the artist’s studio in New York to Stockholm. In a widely noted sale at Bukowskis in the spring of 2011, Scandinavian Beauty, the sister painting to the present work, was sold. Now, Scandinavian Beauty II is offered for sale for the first time, presenting an exceptional opportunity to acquire Warhol’s iconic depiction of a Swedish beauty.

At this time, Warhol was a central figure in the international art and social scene, and his portraits were sought after by collectors and gallerists as well as celebrities, businessmen, and prominent members of the cultural elite. His working process was both systematic and intuitive: using Polaroid photographs, he isolated the sitter’s most expressive features, which were then transferred to canvas through silkscreen printing and hand-painted fields of color. In this process, the face was reduced to its most striking elements - the gaze, the lips, the contours - while the colors imparted an intense, almost electric presence.

Sold at Contemporary Art & Design
VIEWING
April 16–20, Berzelii Park 1, Stockholm
Weekdays 11 AM – 6 PM
Weekends 11 AM – 4 PM
LIVE AUCTION
April 21–22, Arsenalsgatan 2, Stockholm

Warhol received the commission for the present portrait toward the end of 1976. During the opening of his exhibition of portraits of cats and dogs at Galerie Nova on Strandvägen in Stockholm in October of that year, an impromptu photo session was arranged. The woman in question - whom Warhol would come to call his “Scandinavian Beauty”- was summoned at short notice and hurriedly left her home to sit for him. The session bore all the hallmarks of Warhol’s method: concentrated, repetitive, and intense. Using his Polaroid camera, he took approximately fifty photographs in rapid succession, carefully recording subtle variations in expression and pose. When the photo session concluded, something unusual occurred. Despite an otherwise meticulously planned schedule, Warhol found himself with an entire evening free of commitments. In this unexpected interval, the “Scandinavian Beauty” took the initiative and offered to show him the city. Together they ventured into Stockholm’s nightlife, and the evening extended late into the night with visits to restaurants and bars in the Old Town. The atmosphere was unusually relaxed; Warhol, often described as reserved and observant, revealed a more spontaneous and unguarded side.

His new acquaintance entertained him with her forthright personality and sharp sense of humor and the conversation flowed easily, punctuated by frequent laughter.

Some time later, during her stay in New York, they encountered each other by chance in the elevator at The Pierre by Central Park. Recognition was immediate, and the sense of familiarity established in Stockholm returned effortlessly. What began as a brief reunion soon developed into a long evening together in the hotel bar, where conversation resumed as if it had never been interrupted.

When Warhol later completed the portrait in his New York studio, the circumstances had changed. The original commission had, through these encounters, taken on a more personal dimension. On his own initiative, he executed not just one but two paintings of his Swedish model. As Warhol came to know her, a complex and shifting personality increasingly emerged. Fascinated by repetition, he often juxtaposed different facets of character. Scandinavian Beauty and Scandinavian Beauty II do not appear as straightforward commissioned portraits, but are clearly shaped by the artist’s memory and the moments they shared. In their final form, the model appears in a classic three-quarter profile, her face filling the pictorial space with striking monumentality. Warhol emphasizes her most distinctive features: chestnut-colored hair silhouetted against a saturated red field, and a wide, luminous gaze in light blue eyes, accented with shades of green and blue. The two works enter into direct dialogue with other key portraits from the period, such as those of Diane von Fürstenberg (1974), Mick Jagger (1975), and Liza Minnelli (1978), in which the accentuation of eye shadow and lips plays a decisive role. As in these works and, by extension, in the iconic portrayals of Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, and Jackie Kennedy, it is not naturalistic likeness that takes precedence, but heightened presence: the image of the individual that Warhol chose to fix for posterity.

*Henry Geldzahler, “Andy Warhol: Virginal Voyeur,” exhibition catalogue, Sydney, Museum of Contemporary Art, Andy Warhol: Portraits, 1993, p. 26

Andy Warhol, "Mick Jagger"

"Mick Jagger"

Andy Warhol’s fascination with fame and celebrity not only left its mark on his art, but also shaped his lifestyle. From the 1960s onwards, he moved within New York’s innermost celebrity circles, socialising with stars such as Bill Murray and John Lennon. His friendship with Mick Jagger, in particular, attracted considerable attention. Warhol spent much time with Jagger and his then wife Bianca, and their relationship—often chronicled in biographies and articles—received extensive media coverage and came to symbolise the mythical jet-set life of the 1970s.

When Jagger commissioned Warhol to design the Rolling Stones’ iconic album Sticky Fingers in 1971, he was given complete artistic freedom. The result was a close-up of Joe Dallesandro’s crotch in jeans—an image that came to define the band’s charged sex appeal and its desire to push boundaries.

The artistic collaboration between Warhol and Jagger continued, and in 1975 Warhol released a portfolio of ten silkscreen prints based on photographs he himself had taken of Jagger. What made this series unique was that not only Warhol signed the finished works, but Mick Jagger did as well. They are still regarded as some of his most famous and sought-after depictions of celebrity. Like the Sticky Fingers cover, the works capture the essence of two of the most influential creative figures of their time.

Enquiries and Condition Reports

Louise Wrede
Tukholma
Louise Wrede
Asiantuntija, nykytaide, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Karin Aringer
Tukholma
Karin Aringer
Asiantuntija – nykytaide ja valokuva
+46 (0)702 63 70 57
Marcus Kinge
Tukholma
Marcus Kinge
Asiantuntija Taide, Johtava Asiantuntija Grafiikka
+46 (0)739 40 08 27