ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)
ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)

Mao

Details
ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)
Mao
signed and dated 'Andy Warhol 73' (on the overlap)
acrylic and silkscreen ink on linen
12 x 10in. (30.6 x 25.5cm.)
Executed in 1973
Provenance
Leo Castelli Gallery, New York.
Paul Kantor Gallery, Beverly Hills.
Private Collection.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1999.
Literature
N. Printz and S. King-Nero (eds.), The Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings and Sculptures, 1970-1974, vol. 3, New York 2010, pp. 257, 545 and 540, no. 2380 (illustrated in colour, p. 233).

Brought to you by

Anna Touzin
Anna Touzin Senior Specialist, Head of Evening Sale

Lot Essay

‘I have been reading so much about China ... The only picture they ever have is of Mao Zedong. It’s great. It looks like a silkscreen’ (Andy Warhol)

Arriving in a vision of flaming, calligraphic colour, Andy Warhol’s Mao (1973) stems from one of the most important series of the artist’s career. Mao Zedong is screenprinted in black ink against a brilliant backdrop of cadmium yellow, his face surrounded with thick swirling strokes of orange and red. A vivid green impasto adorns the dictator’s jacket. Announcing his triumphant return to painting after a four-year hiatus, the Mao works saw Warhol restage a figure he called ‘the most famous person in the world’—his chosen image was an official portrait from the frontispiece to Mao’s ‘Little Red Book’ of quotations, which he knew was owned by a billion people at the time—as a dazzling Pop spectacle. They represented the first major new series for Warhol since his Flowers of 1964, and, with their rich painterly surfaces, heralded a lush new direction for his practice. The present example has been held in the same private collection for over twenty-five years.

After his shooting by Valerie Solanas in June 1968, Warhol’s painterly output had seen a steep decline, with only a handful of commissioned portraits dating from that time until the start of 1972. The dealer Bruno Bischofberger, trying to push him back into painting, suggested taking on a grand, ambitious new subject: the most important figure of the twentieth century. Bischofberger proposed Albert Einstein. ‘That’s a good idea’, Warhol replied, ‘but I was just reading in Life magazine that the most famous person in the world today is Chairman Mao. Shouldn’t it be the most famous person, Bruno?’ (A. Warhol quoted in B. Colacello, Holy Terror: Andy Warhol Up Close, New York 1990, p. 111). The Life cover story Warhol was reading, published on 3 March 1972, detailed US President Richard Nixon’s historic visit to China the previous month: an important diplomatic overture that marked a thaw in Sino-American relations.

Warhol swiftly identified Mao as a readymade icon. His portrait and uniform—always the same, as reliable as the Coca-Cola logo—were a brand identity, paraded in rallies throughout China, and mass-produced, homogenised and repeated like a silkscreen across global political culture. ‘Mao would be really nutty’, he said of the subject, ‘... not to believe in it, it’d just be in fashion’ (A. Warhol quoted in D. Bourdon, Andy Warhol, New York 1989, p. 317). This deadpan focus on Mao’s fame as a flat image, emptied of political meaning, belied a typically Warholian irony: he was well aware that for many Americans Mao’s face symbolised an alien, threatening ideology, and that repackaging one of capitalism’s chief antagonists as a Pop commodity would give the works a perverse appeal. Warhol would himself travel to China in 1982, visiting the Great Wall and posing in front of Mao’s monumental portrait in Tiananmen Square.

After an initial group of Mao paintings created in early 1972, Warhol went on to produce the series on five discrete scales, following the logic of his Flowers of the previous decade: they would range from the 12” x 10” format of the present work up to ‘giant’ versions more than four metres high. It is in the jewel-like smaller canvases that Warhol’s newly exuberant brushwork comes to the fore. Their scale amplifies the impact of his freehand flourishes of wet-on-wet paint, which fuse the screenprinted impression to the painted field and, in some cases, partly consume Mao’s image. Echoing Abstract Expressionism where his earlier works had tended towards a more hard-edged, mechanical aesthetic, Warhol invigorated his hybrid silkscreen-painting medium with previously unseen dramas of touch and gesture. The interplay of red and yellow in the present Mao shades the Chairman’s face into three dimensions; the surrounding swathes of orange are almost sculptural. With its vibrant colour and its subject’s inscrutable gaze, the work exemplifies the series’ enduring, enigmatic power.

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