Contact Warhol

Contact Warhol Photography Without End - The MIT Press

Hardback (12 Oct 2018)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Andy Warhol's daily practice of photography during the last decade of his life, examined and documented for the first time.

"A picture means I know where I was every minute. That's why I take pictures."
-Andy Warhol

From 1976 until his death in 1987, Andy Warhol was never without his camera. He snapped photos at discos, dinner parties, flea markets, and wrestling matches. Friends, boyfriends, business associates, socialites, celebrities, passers by: all captured Warhol's attention-at least for the moment he looked through the lens. In a way, Warhol's daily photography practice anticipated our current smart phone habits-our need to record our friends, our families, and our food. Warhol printed only about 17 percent of the 130,000 exposures he left on contact sheets. In 2014, Stanford's Cantor Center for the Arts acquired the 3,600 contact sheets from the Warhol Foundation. This book examines and documents for the first time these contact sheets and photographs-Warhol's final body of work

Peggy Phelan and Richard Meyer analyze the contact sheets, never before seen, and their importance in Warhol's oeuvre. Accompanying their text and other essays are reproductions of contact sheets, photographs, and other visual material. The contact sheets present Warhol's point of view, unedited; we know where he was every minute because a photograph remembers it.

Copublished with the Cantor Arts Center

Book information

ISBN: 9780262038997
Publisher: The MIT Press
Imprint: The MIT Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 779.092
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 232
Weight: 1792g
Height: 246mm
Width: 305mm
Spine width: 27mm