ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF NORMAN AND EVE DOLPH
ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)

Liz

Details
ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987)
Liz
offset lithograph in colors, on wove paper, 1964, signed and dated '65' in ball-point pen, from the edition of 300, published by Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, with full margins
Image: 22 x 22 in. (559 x 559 mm.)
Sheet: 23 x 23 in. (584 x 584 mm.)
Literature
Feldman & Schellmann II.7

Brought to you by

Richard Lloyd
Richard Lloyd

Lot Essay

As perhaps the greatest cinematic icon of the silver screen in the latter half of the twentieth century, Elizabeth Taylor was clearly a fitting subject for Warhol’s celebrity-oriented art. For a man who—ever since boyhood—had held an almost obsessive fascination for the glittering allure and glamour of Hollywood and for young female starlets like Shirley Temple and Natalie Wood, it would seem in retrospect only to have been a matter of time before such a major iconic presence such as Liz Taylor entered the Warholian canon. Indeed, of all the many famous stars that Andy Warhol knew and painted, he seems to have held Elizabeth Taylor in especially high regard, seeing her throughout his life as the absolute epitome of glamour. When asked once in 1964 if he would like to meet her, he immediately became coy and bashful, cooing ecstatically in response, “Ohhhh, Elizabeth Taylor, Ohhhhh. She’s so glamorous” (A. Warhol quoted in K. Goldsmith, I’ll be your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, New York, 2004, p. 26). When later in life Warhol met Taylor, growing to become friends with her in the late 1970s and 80s, he was famously heard to quip how as a choice of afterlife, he would like to be reincarnated as a “big ring” on Taylor’s finger.
The present impression is from the collection of Norman Dolph, a music executive, producer and DJ in Warhol’s circle in the 1960s. Dolph initially was asked to provide the music for Warhol’s first solo show at the ICA Philadelphia in 1965 by Ivan Karp. This engagement lead to him providing music between sets at the “Exploding Plastic Inevitable” on St. Mark’s Place. This was New York debut of the Velvet Underground, whose debut album Dolph would ultimately finance.

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