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Andy Warhol: small is beautiful

Past exhibition
13 May 2023 - 25 February 2024 Vermont
  • Information
  • Installation Views
  • Artworks
  • Press
  • Publications
  • Cultural icon, celebrity and provocateur, famed American artist Andy Warhol produced works that are instantly recognizable and have inspired a generation of artists. Seriality and appropriation were signature aspects of Warhol’s painting and sculptural practice.

  • INFORMATION

    Warhol often made many different versions of the same subject, perhaps most famously with his iconic multi-part work, Campbell’s Soup...

    And Warhol, Twenty Fuchsia Maos, 1979

    Warhol often made many different versions of the same subject, perhaps most famously with his iconic multi-part work, Campbell’s Soup Cans (1962) which depicts 32 different versions of a Campbell’s soup can. Shortly after completing these works, Warhol began to make paintings using silk-screens, a process that greatly facilitated his explorations of image multiplicity. For any given subject, Warhol might use several different source images, producing multiple versions of each picture, sometimes in different sized formats, or sometimes using different color combinations for the silkscreen inks and paints, or sometimes both. In other cases, he would use the same exact silkscreen and the same color silkscreen inks and paints, allowing the randomness of the screening process itself to introduce variations in tonality and color saturation in the individual paintings.
  • Warhol was a painter, photographer, draftsman, sculptor, filmmaker, collector and diarist, but this show focuses on just his paintings. And...

    Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, 1967

    Warhol was a painter, photographer, draftsman, sculptor, filmmaker, collector and diarist, but this show focuses on just his paintings. And while Warhol made many large-scale paintings, this is an exhibition of some 100 smaller format, domestically scaled works, all from the Hall Collection, that span his entire career as a fine artist, with important examples from his most seminal series, and which provide a more intimate look at Warhol. The largest work presented here is Twenty Fuchsia Maos (1979), which measures 39 x 38 inches and portrays an iconic reversal (or negative) image of Chairman Mao Zedong repeated 20 times. The smallest work is Roy Lichtenstein (1967), a portrait of Warhol’s Pop Art contemporary which measures just 5 ½ x 4 inches. Altogether, the 100 works presented in “Small is Beautiful” provide a comprehensive retrospective of the paintings of Andy Warhol, but in small scale. 
  • Campbell's Soup Can (1961) is an early example from a signature series in Warhol’s career, and is now one of...

    Andy Warhol, Campbell's Soup Can, 1961

    Campbell's Soup Can (1961) is an early example from a signature series in Warhol’s career, and is now one of the most iconic and recognizable symbols of Pop Art. By using the image of a highly recognizable and commonly available commercial good as his subject, Warhol broke down traditional distinctions between fine art and popular culture. The early example on view is based on an illustrated image of a Campbell’s soup can that Warhol found in a magazine ad. Warhol projected the image of the can onto his canvas and traced its shape. Drawn in pencil and hand-painted with casein, Campbell's Soup Can (1961) illuminates Warhol’s process of breaking-down the image of his appropriated subject. Warhol would soon develop a more mechanized means of making his soup can paintings with a silkscreen process, further developing his strategy of serial repetition.
  • Warhol began playing with the effect of multiple versions of the same image early in his career. By 1964 and...

    Andy Warhol, Flowers, 1964

    Warhol began playing with the effect of multiple versions of the same image early in his career. By 1964 and now working in his “silver factory”, Warhol’s silk-screening process and “assembly-line” means of making paintings and sculpture was well established. Warhol’s Flowers (1964-78) – fifteen of which are on view in varying sizes – each display the same four-flower image screen-printed onto linen. Warhol’s Flowers are based on a photograph of seven hibiscus flowers found in a magazine. Warhol appropriated the original photo – cropping it into a square format, amplifying the contrast, and manipulating the composition so only four flowers were left.  Other than their size, the works are distinguished by their hand-painted colored backgrounds, and individualized traces of the silkscreen process. Repetition, seriality and pattern would persist as fundamental elements throughout Warhol’s career and can be seen in this show in his portraits, Shadow Paintings, Oxidations, and Positive/Negative works.  
  • Warhol was fascinated by celebrity and Hollywood. He believed that celebrities were as much of a consumer commodity as soup...

    Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait (Fright Wig), 1986

    Warhol was fascinated by celebrity and Hollywood. He believed that celebrities were as much of a consumer commodity as soup cans or Brillo boxes. In the early 1960s, he began making series of silk-screened portraits of patrons, friends, celebrities, as well as of himself. Portraiture (including in photography and film) would continue to be a key subject for Warhol through the 1980s with examples included here of the artist Joseph Beuys, Chairman Mao Zedong, as well as a late self-portrait of Warhol wearing his famous spiky “fright wig”. Warhol’s self-image – in his own work and in his public persona – pervades his career and is book ended in this exhibition with Self-portrait (1967) and Self-Portrait (Fright Wig) (1986). Creating “Andy Warhol” as an image, icon, and brand was in some ways Warhol’s ultimate work of art.
  • Installation Views
  • Artworks
    • Andy Warhol, Campbell's Soup Can, 1961
      Andy Warhol, Campbell's Soup Can, 1961
    • Andy Warhol, Double One Dollar Bills, 1962
      Andy Warhol, Double One Dollar Bills, 1962
    • Andy Warhol, Ethel Scull, 1963
      Andy Warhol, Ethel Scull, 1963
    • Andy Warhol, Jackie, 1964
      Andy Warhol, Jackie, 1964
    • Andy Warhol, Flowers, 1964
      Andy Warhol, Flowers, 1964
    • Andy Warhol, The American Man (Portrait of Watson Powell), 1964
      Andy Warhol, The American Man (Portrait of Watson Powell), 1964
    • Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, 1967
      Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, 1967
    • Andy Warhol, Self-portrait, 1967
      Andy Warhol, Self-portrait, 1967
    • Andy Warhol, Mao, 1973
      Andy Warhol, Mao, 1973
    • Andy Warhol, Untitled (Oxidation Painting), 1978
      Andy Warhol, Untitled (Oxidation Painting), 1978
    • Andy Warhol, Twenty Fuchsia Maos, 1979
      Andy Warhol, Twenty Fuchsia Maos, 1979
    • Andy Warhol, Shadow, 1980
      Andy Warhol, Shadow, 1980
    • Andy Warhol, Dollar Sign, 1981
      Andy Warhol, Dollar Sign, 1981
    • Andy Warhol, Crosses, 1981-82
      Andy Warhol, Crosses, 1981-82
    • Andy Warhol, Joseph Beuys, 1983 ca.
      Andy Warhol, Joseph Beuys, 1983 ca.
    • Andy Warhol, Rorschach, 1984
      Andy Warhol, Rorschach, 1984
    • Andy Warhol, Be a Somebody with a Body, 1985
      Andy Warhol, Be a Somebody with a Body, 1985
    • Andy Warhol, Art (negative), 1985-86
      Andy Warhol, Art (negative), 1985-86
    • Andy Warhol, Hamburger (positive), 1985-86
      Andy Warhol, Hamburger (positive), 1985-86
    • Andy Warhol, Detail of the Last Supper, 1986
      Andy Warhol, Detail of the Last Supper, 1986
    • Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait (Fright Wig), 1986
      Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait (Fright Wig), 1986
  • Press

    • ART NEW ENGLAND, Andy Warhol and The Hall Art Foundation in Winter
      Press

      ART NEW ENGLAND

      Andy Warhol and The Hall Art Foundation in Winter March 1, 2024
      Most visitors stroll the sculpture dotted hills and fields of The Hall Art Foundation, located in rural Reading, Vermont, in early spring to fall yet this writer found herself standing...
    • WCAX, LARGEST ANDY WARHOL EXHIBITION IN VERMONT ART HISTORY ON DISPLAY
      Press

      WCAX

      LARGEST ANDY WARHOL EXHIBITION IN VERMONT ART HISTORY ON DISPLAY June 4, 2023
      More than 100 Andy Warhol paintings are on display in Vermont in a first-of-its-kind exhibition.
    • VERMONT PUBLIC, ANDY WARHOL'S WORK IS ON DISPLAY IN THE HALL ART FOUNDATION'S OLD FARMHOUSES
      Press

      VERMONT PUBLIC

      ANDY WARHOL'S WORK IS ON DISPLAY IN THE HALL ART FOUNDATION'S OLD FARMHOUSES May 16, 2023
      More than 100 Andy Warhol paintings are on display in Vermont in a first-of-its-kind exhibition.
    • VERMONT STANDARD, THE HALL OPENS ANDY WARHOL EXHIBIT
      Press

      VERMONT STANDARD

      THE HALL OPENS ANDY WARHOL EXHIBIT May 11, 2023
      It's the largest exhibition of his work ever shown in Vermont
  • Publications
    • Andy Warhol

      Andy Warhol

      Works from the Hall Collection 2016
      Hardcover 240 pages
      Publisher: Hall Art Foundation
      ISBN: 978-0-9896069-7-4
      Dimensions: 11 x 11 inches
      Read more
  • Installation views: Jeffrey Nintzel, Tara Wray
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