Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol

1997 • 162 pages

In a work of great wisdom and insight, art critic and philosopher Arthur Danto delivers a compact, masterful tour of Andy Warhol’s personal, artistic, and philosophical transformations. Danto traces the evolution of the pop artist, including his early reception, relationships with artists such as Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg, and the Factory phenomenon. He offers close readings of individual Warhol works, including their social context and philosophical dimensions, key differences with predecessors such as Marcel Duchamp, and parallels with successors like Jeff Koons. Danto brings to bear encyclopedic knowledge of Warhol’s time and shows us Warhol as an endlessly multidimensional figure—artist, political activist, filmmaker, writer, philosopher—who retains permanent residence in our national imagination. Danto suggests that "what makes him an American icon is that his subject matter is always something that the ordinary American understands: everything, or nearly everything he made art out of came straight out of the daily lives of very ordinary Americans. . . . The tastes and values of ordinary persons all at once were inseparable from advanced art."

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9 released books

Icons of America

Icons of America is a 9-book series first released in 1997 with contributions by Arthur C. Danto, Gore Vidal, and Josh Ozersky.

Andy Warhol
Inventing a Nation: Washington, Adams, Jefferson
The Hamburger: A History
Fred Astaire
The hamburger
The Big House: Image and Reality of the American Prison
Alger Hiss and the Battle for History
Our Hero: Superman on Earth
Joe DiMaggio: The Long Vigil

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