Tag Archive: Andy Warhol


The final peer-assessed assignment for Coursera MOOC on Andy Warhol run by Edinburgh University was to write between 650-750 words to describe, discuss and evaluate a piece of Warhol’s work. This is what I wrote:

Warhol Electric Chair 1964

Andy Warhol always struck the pose of an artist who chanced upon an image in much the same way that a child might discover a striking picture in a glossy magazine.

Yet a sparse and evocative photograph of an electric chair hardly seems to be a random choice. A real photograph carries a weight of fact, even though it can be deciphered in various ways.

Warhol’s image was adapted from a 1953 photograph taken at Sing-Sing Gaol in New York and produced in 1964. It was presented to the Tate Modern in London by Janet Wolfson de Botton in 1996. The medium is screen print and acrylic paint on a canvas sized 562 x 711 mm.

Warhol subsequently re-used the photo for a series of fourteen prints in different colour combinations but this particular one has a muddy, minimalistic colour scheme almost as if the picture has deteriorated with age. An unwitting viewer might therefore mistake it for a torture instrument from a bygone era rather than a killing machine which is still in use in many parts of the USA, albeit on a reduced scale. Continue reading

LOU’S GONE

lou_reed

LOU REED (1942 – 2013)

Lou Reed has gone but is guaranteed as a rock and roll immortal – play all the sad songs you know.

A lot of words will be written in the next few days and weeks. All will confirm that he was one of the towering figures of rock.

For his work with The Velvet Underground alone, he deserves a place in every hall of fame. They are still a band who sound ahead of their time.

His solo work was more uneven but always real.

He had no time for bullshit or the pretentious glam that saps the creative force of lesser mortals.

Berlin and New York are my own favorites but you can find something worthy in everything he did. Continue reading

I have never been to New York but I think it’s safe to assume that the city as portrayed in this lively collection of short stories is very different from when it was first published in 1986.

As Tama Janowitz said in a recent interview, in the 80s it was still possible to buy or rent a relatively cheap terraced house (brownstone) in the centre and communities of struggling artists were commonplace; now these same properties sell for millions and the ragged bohemian culture has been forced out.

Nowadays, she says : “On every block [there] is Starbucks, Banana Republic, The Gap …… it’s changed in such a homogenous, universal way”.

It will also be obvious to any modern reader that the equivalent NYC hipsters would, these days, be jabbering on cellphones or glued to their tablets. A scene in which a woman dare not leave her apartment for fear of missing a call reads as a quaint slice of modern history – is this really how they/we used to live?

But although the setting and details are dated, the ambitions and attitudes of the characters are still recognisable – after all, cities and technology change more rapidly than people do.

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BACKTRACKING # 11 : ALTERED IMAGES

Part of an irregular series of bite-sized posts about 7″ singles I own – shameless nostalgia from the days of vinyl. (Search ‘Backtracking’ to collect the set!)

Altered Images – Dead Pop Stars b/w Sentimental (Epic Records, 1980)

Sleeve design by David Band

Nobody in their right mind could ever have accused John Peel of impropriety.

His hugely influential Radio 1 shows were a model of non racist, non sexist broadcasting without getting all tight-assed and PC about it.

He famously smashed a hip-hop record on air for its homophobic content and played reggae bands before any other mainstream DJ, refusing to be put off by the bigoted hate mail he received as a result.

This was also a man who was once seduced by Germaine Greer!

However, while the music  always came first , there were frequently occasions when Peel was given to crushes on female artists, especially if they combined femininity with a strong, sassy attitude. Into this category I’d place PJ Harvey alongside modern Alt.Country divas Neko Case and Laura Cantrell.

Perhaps a more paternal affection was reserved for super cute Glaswegian 19-year-old Clare Grogan whose schoolgirl voice was more petulant than rebellious. Continue reading

JUST KIDS BY PATTI SMITH

‘Just Kids’ is a fascinating and poetic account of an era when beat culture evolved into punk rock.  It is also an honest and touching diary of a love affair and friendship between two unique artists.

Patti Smith met Robert Mapplethorpe in the Summer of 1967 and, although their ways parted in 1979,  their paths crossed again in 1986 when he was diagnosed with AIDs and she was pregnant with her second child to Fred ‘Sonic’ Smith.

The book begins with her hearing the news of Mapplethorpe’s death on March 9th 1989, aged 42.

Both were born in 1946 and although they came from different backgrounds they each had a rebellious bohemian spirit and Patti Smith jokes that she was “a bad girl trying to be good and that he was a good boy trying to be bad”

Mapplethorpe’s dual nature is part of what fueled his creativity and made him such a fascinating figure . He is constantly represented as a walking contradiction driven by forces of light and dark so that he could appear as “handsome and lost”, “triumphant and troubled” and an artist-hustler  who loved to court controversy yet also “the good son and altar boy”

Patti’s own artist nature was primed by the discovery of “the mystical language” of the French poet Arthur Rimbaud at the age of 16 . (She stole a copy of Illuminations from a bookstall at a bus depot in Philadelphia).

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