ANDY WARHOL Joseph Beuys

ARTIST:
ANDY WARHOL

TITLE:
Joseph Beuys

MEDIUM:
Screenprint on Lenox Museum Board.

YEAR:
1980/83

SIZE:
40" x 32"

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EDITION
:

Edition of 150, 36 AP, 9 PP, 45 individual TP not in portfolios, signed and numbered in pencil lower right. State I: 1980 - 50 numbered 101-150, AP 25/36-36/36, PP 7/9-9/9.

 

Joseph Bueys: He was an influential German artist who came to prominence in the 1960s. He is most famous for his ritualistic public performances and his energetic championing of the healing potential of art and the power of a universal human creativity. As well as performances, Beuys produced sculptures, environments, vitrines, 450 prints and posters, and thousands of drawings. He was also a committed teacher and increasingly devoted much of his energy to German politics. A charismatic and controversial figure, the nature and value of Beuys’s contribution to Western art has elicited a hotly contested and often polarised debate.  Beuys’s first solo exhibition in a private gallery was opened on November 26, 1965 with one of the artist’s most famous and compelling performances: How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare. The artist could be viewed through the glass of the gallery’s window. His face was covered in honey and gold leaf, an iron slab was attached to his boot. In his arms he cradled a dead hare, into whose ear he mumbled muffled noises as well as explanations of the drawings that lined the walls. Such materials and actions had specific symbolic value for Beuys. For example, honey was the product of bees who, for Beuys (following Rudolf Steiner), represented as ideal society of warmth and brotherhood. Gold had its importance within alchemical enquiry, and iron, the metal of Mars, stood for a masculine principle of strength and connection to the earth. Beuys produced many such spectacular, ritualistic performances, and he developed a compelling persona whereby he took on a liminal, shamanistic role, as if to enable passage between different physical and spiritual states. Further examples of such performances include: EURASIA (1965), Celtic (Kinloch Rannoch) Scottish Symphony (1970), and I Like America and America Likes Me (1974). (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Beuys).

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Screenprint in 3 states; States II and III have rayon flock. Printer: Rupert Jasen Smith, New York Publisher: Editions Schellmann & Klüser, Munich/New York

© 2008 Gallery Warhol. All artwork is © 1987-2008 The ANDY WARHOL Foundation for the Visual Arts.