Andy Warhol
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Andy Warhol

Moonwalk (F. & S. II.404-405)

Details
Andy Warhol
Moonwalk (F. & S. II.404-405)
the set of two screenprints in colours, 1987, on Lenox Museum Board, each with the artist's printed signature, numbered 18/160 (there were also 31 artist's proofs), signed and numbered by the executor of the Andy Warhol Estate, the publisher and the printer Rupert Jasen Smith in pencil on the reverse, published by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, Inc., New York, the full sheets, both in excellent condition, framed
I., S. 965 x 965 mm.
(2)
Special notice
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Lot Essay

At the time of his death, Andy Warhol was working on a major portfolio entitled TV, in which he aimed to trace the history of television. Moonwalk, the only completed image in the project, is an example of the quintessential post-war American icons portrayed by Warhol. Using a freeze-frame image originally broadcast to millions of viewers, the astronaut Buzz Aldrin stands next to the American flag he has placed on the moon. Warhol returns to this seminal moment through the technique of screenprint. Combining a palette of neon colours, and fluorescent outlines, he updates the original image to reflect the flourishing visual culture of the 1980’s. Warhol's initials can be discerned across Aldrin's visor; a typical ironic touch by the artist who thereby adds his mark to the famous image, just as the American flag was added to the surface of another world.

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