Andy Warhol Museum of Modern Art
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The Andy Warhol Museum of Modern Art (Slovak: Múzeum Andyho Warhola Medzilaborce or Múzeum Moderného Umenia Andyho Warhola) in Medzilaborce, Slovakia, was established in 1991 by the American family of the artist Andy Warhol and the Slovak Ministry of Culture. Until 1996, AWMMA (the English-language acronym of the museum) was called The Warhol Family Museum of Modern Art.[citation needed]
Two exhibitions in 1962 announced Andy Warhol's dramatic entry into the art world. In July, at the Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles, he exhibited his now-iconic Campbell's Soup Cans. The work's 32 canvases, each one featuring a different variety of the company's 32 soups, were lined up in a single row on a ledge that wrapped around the gallery. 'Cans sit on shelves,' the gallery director, Irving Blum, later said of the installation. 'Why not?' The paintings marked a breakthrough for Warhol, who had previously worked as a commercial illustrator: they were among his first works based on consumer goods, and among the first to embrace serial repetition. Although he hand-painted each canvas, they were made to seem mechanically produced[1][full citation needed]
The museum's Andy Warhol Permanent Exhibition consists of 160 Warhol works of art, mostly drawings and silkscreens, as well as Warhol memorabilia.[2] Also displayed are works by Andy Warhol's brother, Paul Warhol, and Paul Warhol's son, James Warhola. The museum features prominently in the 2001 documentary Absolut Warhola, directed by Stanislaw Mucha.[3]
See also
- The Andy Warhol Museum, located in Warhol's native Pittsburgh, US.
- List of single-artist museums
References
- ^ MoAndy Warhol American, 1928–1987, MoMA
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-08-25. Retrieved 2016-08-09.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ "Absolut Warhola (2001) - IMDb". www.imdb.com. Retrieved 2021-06-01.
- Geary, James; Stojaspal, Jan (2005). "The Rusyns". Time. Archived from the original on September 11, 2005. Retrieved May 11, 2007.
- Gruber, Ruth Ellen (1993). "Warhol Pops Up in Carpathia". The New York Times. Retrieved May 11, 2007.
External links
49°16′15″N 21°54′15″E / 49.27083°N 21.90417°E
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