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Myths (Warhol)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Myths
ArtistAndy Warhol
Year1981
MediumScreenprint with diamond dust on Lenox Museum Board

Myths is a 1981 series of ten paintings by AmericanPop artistAndy Warhol. The portraits feature popular characters from 20th-century films and television as well as traditionalfolklore.

Background

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Warhol began working on theMyths series in October 1980, a project commissioned by galleristRonald Feldman.[1][2] The ten works includeMargaret Hamilton reprising her role as theWicked Witchof the West from the 1939 filmThe Wizard of Oz; models transformed intoUncle Sam,Santa Claus,Mammy, andDracula; the originalHowdy Doody puppet; and Warhol himself as The Shadow.[3] Rendered in vivid color, energetic line, and diamond-dust accents, the series marked Warhol's first print portfolio devoted to fictional characters and recalls his early 1960s paintings based on comic-strip figures.[4]

Subjects

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Exhibitions

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TheMyths series was first exhibited at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, Downtown in New York City in September 1981.[5]

In October 1981,Myths was on view at the NorthPark National Bank art gallery in Dallas, presented together with a three-print study of boxerMuhammad Ali and Warhol’s earlyCampbell's Soup Cans works.[6]

Weinstock's department store inSacramento incorporatedMyths into its holiday promotion, displaying the serigraphs in-store and granting an art scholarship in Warhol's name to theUniversity of California, Davis.[7] Weinstock commissioned Warhol to create work for the cover of its 1981 Christmas magazine,The Art of Giving, which featured his Santa Claus serigraph from theMyths portfolio.[8] The print later became part of the store's permanent collection. Warhol traveled to San Francisco in November 1981, where he appeared at the store to sign reproductions from theMyths series.[9]

In 1982,Myths was exhibited at the Reconnaissance Gallery inFitzroy, Victoria.[10]

In May 1988, thePittsburgh Children's Museum opened the Andy Warhol Myths gallery, featuring Warhol'sMyths series, which were acquired for the museum's permanent collection, and a hands-onsilkscreening studio.[11]

Critical reception

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Art criticRobert Rooney wrote forThe Age: "'Myths' is essentially a slick, commercial package that combines the marketing expertise of its publisher Ronald Feldman and Warhol's habit of never saying no to any suggestion. Considered as such, the series works well with some reservations. … The 10 prints are immaculately printed and carefully color coordinated, particularly in 'Dracula' and 'Mammy' where close tones and black-on-black are used with subtlety. … If you prefer Warhol's classic icons of the 60s, with their clogged screens and other processed accidents, you will probably be repelled by the slickness of the Myths."[10]

Art market

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In 1981, Weinstock's department store offered its customers a set for $15,000 or individual serigraphs for $1,500.[8]

In October 2018, a suite of 10 screenprints from theMyths portfolio sold for $780,500 atChristie's in New York.[12]

In February 2025, individual paintings from a set were sold for a total of $832,900 at Christie's online "Andy Warhol Myths" single-artist auction.[13][3]

References

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  1. ^Warhol & Hackett 1980, p. 333, Entry date: October 7, 1980.
  2. ^Warhol & Hackett 1980, p. 347, Entry date: December 9, 1980.
  3. ^abde Souza, Isabella (October 1, 2025)."Pop Mythology: Andy Warhol's Take On Contemporary Icons".MyArtBroker. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  4. ^Grudin, Anthony E. (2024-05-31).Warhol's Working Class: Pop Art and Egalitarianism. University of Chicago Press. pp. 40–42.ISBN 978-0-226-34780-6.
  5. ^"Warhol delves into 'Myths'".Newsday (Suffolk Edition). 1981-09-20. pp. 20/Part II. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  6. ^Lowe, Ron (1981-09-27)."Art Notes".Fort Worth Star-Telegram. pp. 5D. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  7. ^Green, Blake (1981-11-16)."Warhol: The Simplest of Superstars".San Francisco Chronicle. p. 20. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  8. ^ab"The Art of Giving".The Modesto Bee. 1981-11-08. pp. Weinstock's 2. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  9. ^Simon, Richard (1981-11-15)."Andy Warhol on display at Weinstock's".The Sacramento Union. pp. D16. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  10. ^abRooney, Robert (1982-04-21)."Warhol and the myths of childhood".The Age. p. 10. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  11. ^Miller, Donald (1988-05-13)."Warhol Gallery an education in silk screens".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 2. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  12. ^"The First AI-Generated Portrait Ever Sold at Auction Shatters Expectations, Fetching $432,500—43 Times Its Estimate".Artnet News. 2018-10-25. Retrieved2025-11-04.
  13. ^"Superman Leads Christie's Online $832,900 'Andy Warhol Myths' Auction".HENI News. February 17, 2025. Retrieved2025-11-04.

Source

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  • Warhol, Andy; Hackett, Patt (1980).The Andy Warhol Diaries. New York: Warner Books.ISBN 978-0-446-51426-2.
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