Apr 21st 2011

This is the first time a single installation of a large number of the panels from Shadows has been exhibited in Chicago. Shadows was acquired by the Dia Art Foundation from the artist during its inaugural exhibition at the Heiner Friedrich gallery in New York in 1979. It has been on permanent view at Dia:Beacon, Dia Art Foundation’s museum of renowned artworks from the 1960s to the present, located on the banks of the Hudson River in Beacon, New York since 2003. The entire installation of Shadows (102 panels) will be exhibited at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC, in the fall of 2011.

The Arts Club will install 54 of the 76 x 52 inch panels abutted and in random order. Shadows, 1978–1979, was created contemporary to Warhol’s series of Oxidations, and following his Skulls, and Hammer and Sickles, and before the Diamond Dust Shoes. Ronnie Cutrone, Warhol’s painting assistant at the time, said of Shadows’ inception:

Andy had a burning desire to do abstract art… and I said, “you’re Andy Warhol; you should paint something that is something, but it’s not… you should paint shadows. You love shadows anyway. They’re all in your work”… I had 150 shadow photographs on contact sheets twelve days later. We picked some of them out and then he asked me to mix the colors for them.

Two photographs were chosen to be silkscreened over the painted backgrounds. The impasto texture of some panels was achieved by applying the paint with a mop. The palette was chosen from Warhol’s favorite colors: “aubergine, chartreuse, carmine red, yellow, midnight blue… and white.”

Shadows was a singular work for Warhol, both in its nod to abstraction and in its scope. The installation of Shadows was used as a backdrop for a fashion editorial in the April 1979 issue of Warhol’s magazine, Interview. When questioned whether the paintings were art, Warhol self-depreciatingly answered, “No. You see, the opening party had disco. I guess that makes them disco décor.”

Andy Warhol studied pictorial design at the Carnegie Institute of Technology in Pittsburgh. Following a successful career as a commercial illustrator in New York in the 1950s, he exhibited silkscreened paintings beginning in 1962, eventually becoming both a cultural icon and a major component of the Pop Art movement. He was not only known for his work, but he himself had an immense impact on the contemporary sociocultural milieu, from designing album covers for the band Velvet Underground and founding the magazine Interview, to creating films and overseeing his Factory and its infamous scene. Warhol’s work was exhibited widely throughout the world during his lifetime and after, and both he and his work continue to be a major force in contemporary art and culture.

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