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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Andy Warhol: Ten Portraits
of Jews of the Twentieth Century
24 January - 2 July 2006
Balcony Gallery
Admission free

Albert Einstein
by Andy Warhol, 1980
© Private Collection
Sarah Bernhardt
by Andy Warhol, 1980
© Private Collection

The Marx Brothers
by Andy Warhol, 1980
© Private Collection
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Andy Warhol is widely recognised
as one of the most significant artists of the late twentieth
century, and Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century
is, arguably, among his most important paintings. However, twenty
six years after it was created and first exhibited, numerous
questions remain about the artist's intentions and the work's
meaning.
A pantheon of great thinkers,
politicians, performers, musicians and writers, Warhol's great
sequence of portraits of 'Jewish geniuses' was originally shown
at The Jewish Museum, New York in 1980. Arching across the century,
the breadth of achievement represented by these figures is formidable.
Indeed, the selection seems calculated to touch every aspect
of human experience. The line-up comprised: Sarah Bernhardt,
the celebrated French stage actress; Louis Brandeis, the first
Jewish judge to be appointed to the Supreme Court of the United
States; Martin Buber the renowned philosopher, story-teller and
pedagogue; Albert Einstein, one of the greatest scientists of
the twentieth century; Sigmund Freud the hugely influential founder
of the psychoanalytic school of psychology; the Marx Brothers,
celebrated comedians of vaudeville, stage and cinema; Golda Meir,
one of the founders of the State of Israel; George Gershwin,
the distinguished American composer; Franz Kafka, the major German
writer, and Gertrude Stein, the important American novelist.
Even so, the critical response
to the show was decidedly mixed and, at times, intensely hostile.
The New York Times was unsparing: 'the show is vulgar,
it reeks of commercialism, and its contribution to art is nil'.
In sharp contrast, Art Forum argued: 'the paintings are
staggering', and it noted 'an unexpected mix of cultural anthropology,
portraiture, celebration of celebrity, and study of intelligentsia
all at the same time'.
The paintings are a remarkable
achievement and in many ways represent a peak in Warhol's oeuvre.
Magisterial in conception, they advance a new subtlety and sophistication
in technical terms. One of their most compelling aspects is the
way surface and image are held in a satisfying and fascinating
dialogue, generating new depths of meaning and implication. This
is due in no small part to Warhol's combination of abstract elements
with archival photographs which strike the viewer with the force
of familiarity.
The disjunction between sitter
and surface is a visual device that unites the portraits, but
the series has a conceptual unity also. Warhol's insistence that
the subjects be deceased invests the series with an inescapable
character of mortality. The faces of the dead appear as if behind
a veneer of modernity. As individuals they belong in the past,
while their image persists in the present. The tension sustained
between photograph and abstraction focuses the issue of their
celebrity. Probing the faultlines between the person and their
manufactured, surface image, Warhol presents these individuals'
fame as a complex metamorphosis. The real has been transformed
into a glorious, poignant, other-worldly abstraction.
The portraits, which are on loan
from a private collector, are being exhibited at the National
Portrait Gallery in 2006 - the first time this controversial
work has been shown in this country. The exhibition is accompanied
by the publication of a new essay on this controversial work
by Paul Moorhouse, Curator, 20th Century, National Portrait Gallery.
Publications
Andy
Warhol: Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century
16 page booklet to accompanying the National Portrait Gallery
Balcony display.
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