May 25, 2017 - Sale 2449

Sale 2449 - Lot 311

Price Realized: $ 3,750
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 5,000 - $ 7,500
D'APRÈS ANDY WARHOL (1928-1987) ANDY WARHOL / INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART, BOSTON. 1966.
33 3/4x21 3/4 inches, 85 3/4x55 1/4 cm.
Condition B+: creases and abrasions at edges and in corners; pin holes in corners. Silkscreen. Paper.
Following an article in Time magazine on American Pop in which he was featured, Warhol's first solo show of Pop paintings was at the Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles, in 1962. His first solo show in New York City was later that year at the Stable Gallery. The following years, with the burgeoning interest in Pop Art, saw his paintings included in group shows at such venerated institutions as the Pasadena Art Museum, Sidney Janis Gallery, Ileana Sonnabend Gallery (in Paris), the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Institute of Contemporary Art in London and the Leo Castelli Gallery. Towards the end of 1965, his first solo museum show was held at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania. That opening has entered into Art History legend as Warhol, Edie Sedgwick and others in his retinue had to flee the scene as the crowd had become so large and unruly. His second solo museum show was the following year at the Institute for Contemporary Art in Boston. In conjunction with this exhibition, the Institute published the renowned Campbell's Soup Can (Tomato) on a shopping bag. For the poster, the museum employs the same image used by Leo Castelli for a Warhol show earlier that year, a self-portrait based on a photograph taken by Rudolph Burkhardt. Curiously, the museum credits the photographer with the image, despite the fact that Warhol refers to it as a self-portrait. rare.