ANDY WARHOL/SUPERNOVA: Stars, Deaths, and Disasters, 1962 - 1964
Touring Exhibition
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  November 13, 2005 - February 26, 2006
  Target Gallery
  March 18 - June 18, 2006
  Museum of Contemporary Art
  Chicago, Illinois
  July 8 - October 22, 2006
  Art Gallery of Ontario
  Toronto, Ontario, Canada
From civil rights marchers attacked by police dogs on the pages of LIFE magazine to nightly footage of the Vietnam War to the Zapruder film of John F. Kennedy’s assassination to the iconic face of Marilyn Monroe, the early sixties were a time of mediated mayhem. Tabloid headlines and news reports presented images that would have existed a decade earlier only in the imagination. During this period of time, Andy Warhol made a pivotal shift that reflected this mass production of arresting imagery—from handmade paintings to work created through the new mechanical process of photosilkscreening. ANDY WARHOL/SUPERNOVA: Stars, Deaths, and Disasters, 1962–1964, the first solo exhibition of the artist’s work organized by the Walker, brings together 26 paintings created during those years that feature images of both tragic celebrity (Marilyn Monroe and the widowed Jackie Kennedy) and everyday disasters (car wrecks, electric chairs, and murders).

Trained as a commercial artist, Warhol began his career by producing hand-drawn images for newspaper and magazine advertisements. Initially, he focused on standard brands and product logos—Coca-Cola, Campbell’s, Brillo. Soon, however, he abandoned the freehand stencil, opting instead for mechanical production and using newspaper and tabloid clippings depicting celebrities, movie stars, and daily life as sources for his pictures. Warhol was especially seduced by the notion of the artist as a “machine” that produces art in the most casual, easy, and informal ways. He adopted the commercial photo-silkscreen technique as a method of creating mass-produced images that he subsequently printed in assembly-line fashion. . . .
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