Andy Warhol. Love, Sex, and Desire. Drawings 1950-1962
- 392pages
- 14 heures de lecture
Blake Gopnik est un critique d'art américain dont le travail couvre une gamme variée de sujets esthétiques. Ses analyses se caractérisent par leur profondeur et leur perspicacité, abordant souvent des sujets allant de la culture populaire à la gastronomie. Le style critique de Gopnik est réputé pour sa vivacité d'esprit et sa capacité à découvrir des significations cachées dans l'art et au-delà. Ses écrits encouragent les lecteurs à voir le monde qui les entoure avec un regard neuf.


This definitive biography explores the life of a paradoxical figure, one of the most influential artists of any age. While Andy Warhol is often associated with iconic images like soup cans and Marilyn Monroe, his life and work reveal a far more complex individual. Esteemed art critic Blake Gopnik delves into Warhol's depth, emphasizing that "the meanings of his art depend on the way he lived and who he was." Gopnik highlights the significance of Warhol's biography, from his working-class Pittsburgh upbringing as an immigrant's child to his early career in commercial art, culminating in his total immersion in the performance of being an artist. This journey led to global fame, stardom, and even an attempted assassination. The extensive range of Warhol's success and his efforts to evade biographical scrutiny have made it challenging to create a complete image of him. However, Gopnik's biography, marked by unprecedented scope and access to Warhol's archives, brings to life a figure of contradictions—sweet and caring yet coldhearted, a deep thinker but a lover of kitsch, a faithful churchgoer yet a skeptic and cynic. This immersive work offers the most intricate portrait of an artist who defied easy categorization and whose influence continues to resonate in today's culture.