Apr 26, 2018 - Sale 2475

Sale 2475 - Lot 275

Unsold
Estimate: $ 1,000 - $ 1,500
WARHOL, ANDY; and GERARD MALANGA / CONTEMPORARY ART. Screen Tests / A Diary. 54 black-and-white screen test film strips reproduced on acetate, one facing each page of poetry by Gerard Malanga; 10x 7 1/2 inches. Large 8vo, original pictorial wrappers, spine faded and slightly creased. New York: Kulchur Press, 1967

Additional Details

"Approximately 500 portrait films were made by Andy Warhol between 1964 and 1966, the period when he realized his revolutionary vision of celebrity. Using a stationary camera, Warhol manipulated light and shadow in increasingly inventive ways to capture the appearance, style, personality, and mood of both famous and lesser-known visitors to his studio, the Factory. For each silent, black-and-white film portrait, subjects—including 'Baby' Jane Holzer, Cass Elliott, Dennis Hopper, Gerard Malanga, Beverly Grant, Edie Sedgwick, Susan Sontag, and Salvador Dalí—were seated, initially instructed not to move, and filmed straight-on (most often in close-up).

Although each film was shot at standard sound speed, or 24 frames per second, Warhol specified that prints be projected at a slower speed of 16 frames per second, a rate used in the projection of silent films. The result is an unusual fluidity of pace, a rhythm gently at odds with the starkness of the lighting and the boldness of the close-ups of face and hair. Transferred from 16mm to DVD for gallery exhibition, these arresting and influential works are innovative both as film and photograph, reinventing traditional portraiture through deceptively simple means"--MoMA archives, Andy Warhol Screen Tests: May 1–September 1, 2003