A similar approach was central to the work of both—portrait photography. Both artists enjoyed celebrity status in an audience beyond the art world, and both manipulated their personas as evidenced, in the exhibition, by each of their self-portraits in drag. While Warhol produced documents of celebrity and glamour, Mapplethorpe focused on the aesthetics of the body and his subjects' sexual presence.
Celebrity Portraits
Sean Kelly Gallery is delighted to announce the first ever-joint exhibition by two of the most influential artists of our times - Robert Mapplethorpe and Andy Warhol. The opening of the exhibition will take place on Thursday, June 8th from 6pm to 8pm.
Mapplethorpe / Warhol: Celebrity Portraits, is an opportunity to explore the two artists’ parallel approaches through a genre, which was central to the work of both—portrait photography. There are striking similarities in the ways Warhol and Mapplethorpe approached the photographic image.
The camera was an essential element in the making of Warhol’s silkscreen paintings, and the photograph is well known as the basis for his appropriated Pop Culture images. Nevertheless, the Polaroids in this exhibition, taken with the Big Shot camera in the 70s and 80s, were, as Peter Hay Halpert described, “unlike his other photographs...these reveal Warhol, the photographer, to a greater degree than we have recognized. Warhol’s Polaroids are a personal statement in a way that none of his other photographs are. Where there is no artistry in the photo-booth pictures (a not undesired aspect), the Polaroids reveal Warhol behind the camera, making choices."
Mapplethorpe, a great admirer of Warhol, also embraced appropriation in his first use of photography. As demonstrated in the exhibition’s 1972 portrait of Warhol, he began by appropriating commercially printed imagery, and it was not until the early 1970s that he took his first photographs with a Polaroid camera. Like Warhol, Mapplethorpe turned away from the world in which he grew up and became fascinated by the allure of New York City.
Both artists enjoyed celebrity status in an audience beyond the art world, and both manipulated their personas as evidenced, in the exhibition, by each of their self-portraits in drag. While Warhol produced documents of celebrity and glamour, Mapplethorpe focused on the aesthetics of the body and his subjects’ sexual presence.
Mapplethorpe/Warhol Celebrity Portraits gives us the opportunity to juxtapose the artists’ portraits of each other, as well as both artists’ images of celebrities such as Grace Jones, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Keith Haring, Deborah Harry, Roy Lichtenstein, Francesco Clemente and Truman Capote.
Coinciding with the exhibition, Sean Kelly Gallery will present in its project space the installation A Couple of Things I Have To Tell You by the artist Paolo Canevari. For a decade and a half, Canevari has been carving, molding and transforming the material of rubber from automobile tires. In this site specific installation the artist continues to investigate his chosen medium, exploring notions of faith and merging elements of video and performance.
Please contact Tei Carpenter at the gallery (212.239.1181) or tei@skny.com for further information. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday from 11am until 6pm and Saturday from 10am until 6pm. In July, gallery hours are Monday through Friday from 10am until 5pm.
Sean Kelly Gallery
528 West 29th Street - New York