ANDY WARHOL
ANDY WARHOL

Endangered Species (F. & S. II.293-302)

细节
ANDY WARHOL
Endangered Species (F. & S. II.293-302)
the complete set of ten signed screenprints in colors, 1983, on Lenox Museum Board, numbered 32/150 (there were also 30 artist's proofs for each), published by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, Inc., New York, with their blindstamp on the reverse, the full sheets, in very good condition, each framed
Each S. 38 x 38 in. (965 x 965 mm.) (10)

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拍品专文

Andy Warhol's Endangered Species series was born out of a conversation between Warhol and the commissioner, Ronald Feldman, concerning the ecological issue of beach erosion. Given Warhol's curiosity with animals, he was eager to take on the project proposed to him by Feldman. The resulting screenprints highlight ten endangered animals in a colorful, upbeat manner, which Warhol described as "animals in make up". His focus on the animals in isolation, with the pop-art palette, puts them on a level of superstardom along with the infamous screenprints of his past: Marilyn Monroe, Liz Taylor and Muhammad Ali. The viewer consequently regards the animals in the same immortalizing light as those celebrities.