
Andy Warhol 1928-1987
Further images
In 1962, Andy Warhol began his money paintings - his first foray into
screenprinting - in which he focused on the symbolic significance of
the American dollar, producing small single studies of one and two
dollar bills as well as monumental gridded compositions of currency.
Warhol recollected how he came upon this series: "It was one of those
evenings when I'd asked around ten or fifteen people for suggestions
that finally one lady friend of mine asked me the right question: 'Well,
what do you love most?' That's how I started painting money." One Dollar Bill (Back),
1962, is an early and iconic example from this celebrated series,
exemplifying the artist's lifelong fascination with consumer culture,
the 'American Dream', power, wealth, glamour, serial repetition and mass
production.
Provenance
Peder Bonnier, New YorkBruno Bischofberger, Zurich
Gabriele and Tilman Osterwold, Stuttgart
Annett Osterwold Collection, Berlin
Galerie Andrea Caratsch, St.Moritz
Exhibitions
Hamburg, Deichtorhallen; Stuttgart, Würtembergischer Kunstverein, Andy Warhol - Retrospektiv, July 1993 - February 1994, p. 56, illustrated in colour
Venice, Fondazione Cini, Robert Rauschenberg & Andy Warhol - Us Silkscreeners..., 12 May - 27 August 2017, pp. 47-48, illustrated in colour
Publications
Georg Frei and Neil Printz, eds., The Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonné: Paintings and Sculpture, 1961-1963, New York 2002, vol. 01, p. 144, no. 158, illustrated in colour