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Andy Warhol Essay

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Andy Warhol

Warhol was successful in bringing a new form of art to the forefront of an ever changing artworld in the 1960`s. I am interested in the field of commercial and graphic art and it's connection to advertising.
That's why I have chosen Warhol as my subject for this essay.
I'm going to focus on the techniques and images he used on his paintings.

Andy Warhol is one of the world's most renown artists. He was a painter, a photographer, a filmmaker, a publisher of Interview magazine and he loved a good party. Andy reflected many aspects of American culture as no one had done before him. He was as famous for his weird appearance; silver wigs, crazy glasses as for his striking short answers to questions. Warhol was born in …show more content…

This article proved his reliability and skills, and it helped him get other such jobs, for example illustrating adds for Harper's Bazaar and vogue. He became one of the most wanted illustrators of women's accessories in New York and was awarded the Art Directors' Club Medal for his designs of newspaper advertisements.
Much of his future material can be placed in the category of such common, everyday objects, that were focused on in these early times. Nearly all of Warhol's works relate in one way or another to the commercially mass-produced machine product.
Although Warhol did receive recognition for much of his commercial illustrations during those times, he was constantly pursuing another career, as a serious artist. Unfortunately, Warhol was not so successful at first in obtaining this goal. His delicate ink drawings of shoes and cupids, among various others, had no place in a decade dominated by such heroic artists as William de Kooning and Jackson Pollock.
But then he began working on a process called silk-screening. A large photographic image is transferred to a silk screen, placed on a canvas and inked from the back.
It was this technique that enabled him to produce a series of mass media images beginning in 1962. This series is generally regarded as a comment on the banality and harshness of American culture while celebrating its most recognisable icons.
This

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