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Marilyn Diptych

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Silkscreen painting by Andy Warhol
Marilyn Diptych
ArtistAndy Warhol
Year1962
MediumSilkscreen ink and acrylic paint on canvas[1]
Dimensions205.44 cm × 289.56 cm (80.88 in × 114.00 in)
LocationTate Modern,London

Marilyn Diptych is a 1962silkscreen print by Americanpop artistAndy Warhol depictingMarilyn Monroe. The monumental work is one of the artist's most noted of the movie star.

The print consists of 50 images.[2] Each image of the actress is taken from the singlepublicity photograph from the filmNiagara (1953). The underlying publicity photograph that Warhol used as a basis for his many paintings and prints of Marilyn, and theMarilyn Diptych, was owned and distributed by her movie studio.Marilyn Diptych was completed just weeks afterMarilyn Monroe'sdeath in August 1962.

Silk-screening was the technique used to create this print. The twenty-five images on the left are painted in color, the right side is black and white, with color and image becoming increasingly distorted.[3]

TheMarilyn Diptych is in the collection of theTate.[1]

Analysis

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The original 1953 publicity photo

It has been suggested that the relation between the left side of the canvas and the right side of the canvas is evocative of the relation between the celebrity's life and death.[1][4][5] The work has received praise from writers such as American academic and cultural criticCamille Paglia, who wrote in 2012'sGlittering Images lauding how it shows the "multiplicity of meanings" in Monroe's life and legacy.[6]

In a December 2, 2004, article inThe Guardian, the painting was named the third most influential piece of modern art in a survey of 500 artists, critics, and others.[7] The artwork was also ranked ninth in the past 1,000 years by Kathleen Davenport, Director, Rice University Art Gallery, Houston.[8]

Appropriation and fair use

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Warhol is regarded as an artist known for the appropriation of images and he often made use of publicity photographs and publicly available photographs and motifs not owned by him, which often brought him into conflict with the owners of the source material. An example of this is Warhol's Marilyn series including theMarilyn Diptych, which resulted in a settlement with the owner of the Marilyn Monroe publicity photograph which he used as the source material for the paintings. Warhol and his estate have settled many copyright disputes including with regard to his famous flowers paintings and paintings of Jackie Kennedy, as discussed in detail in "Andy The Appropriator: The Copyright Battles You Won't Hear About at The Whitney's Warhol Exhibit" fromThe Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts:

Although some of Warhol’s work was commissioned by individuals or companies, much of it was appropriated from other artists, photographers, and brands. Two of his most famous pieces,Marilyn Diptych and the collection of Campbell’s soup cans, are examples of his habit of appropriation. For theMarilyn series, Warhol took a promotional photograph of Marilyn Monroe and transferred it onto silkscreen print using different colors. He did not own the promotional photograph that he used and he did not have permission to use it. The resulting work was transformative enough that a strong fair use argument could be made today, but Warhol’s appropriation is undeniable. Similarly, Warhol used the Campbell’s Soup logo without permission from the company for dozens of silkscreen prints. Eventually, Campbell’s Soup tacitly approved of his use because of the free marketing they were receiving, but Warhol’s use of their logo without initial permission was still appropriation.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abc"Andy Warhol Marilyn Diptych 1962".Tate. February 2016. RetrievedOctober 14, 2018.
  2. ^"Marilyn Diptych by Andy Warhol – Facts & History of the Painting".Totally History. May 12, 2013.
  3. ^SINGULART (February 7, 2024)."Marilyn Diptych: A Masterpiece by Andy Warhol".Magazine. RetrievedSeptember 23, 2025.
  4. ^Helen Gardner, et al.Gardner's Art Through the Ages. Thompson Wadsworth, 2004. 1054.
  5. ^Carol Salus. "Behind the Celestial Enchantment".The Poetry of Life in Literature. Ed.Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka. Springer, 2000. 198.
  6. ^Rosen, Gary (October 16, 2014)."The Pagan Aesthetic".The Wall Street Journal. RetrievedJuly 17, 2014.
  7. ^Charlotte Higgins. "Work of art that inspired a movement ... a urinal".The Guardian. December 2, 2004. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
  8. ^(May 19, 2000). Which art will top the Chartres? Four curators share their Top 10 picks and reasoning behind the most influential visual artworks of the past 1,000 years.Christian Science Monitor, p. 12. Retrieved October 22, 2019.
  9. ^"Andy The Appropriator: The Copyright Battles You Won't Hear About at The Whitney's Warhol Exhibit | The Columbia Journal of Law & the Arts".journals.library.columbia.edu. RetrievedMarch 31, 2021.

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