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  • Andy Warhol's Wig & Glasses

Andy Warhol's Wig & Glasses

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$18,000.00
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Andy Warhol's Wig and Glasses

East 66th St NYC 1987


Available sizes:


20" x 24"

Archival Inkjet on Paper

Edition size: 10


20" x 24"

Chromogenic print on Aluminum

Edition size: 10


40" x 48"

Chromogenic print on Aluminum

Edition size: 5


Signed, titled, dated, and annotated on the reverse. Certificate of Authenticity included.


The wig series consists of four images representing Warhol’s beliefs in Life and Death. The two statuettes of Rameses and Isis, the god’s of external existence and the god of money, and the watch representing material possession and Time. Each image is slightly different in content.


Please contact us at +312.852.8200 for more details about this work.

Or email us at info@hilton-asmus.com


BIOGRAPHY:


David Gamble is a multidisciplinary artist from London, now based in New Orleans. His body of work consists of paintings, works on paper, and photographs, all of which have been exhibited globally. Throughout the 1980s and '90s, Gamble worked as one of the foremost international editorial photographers for publications such as The Observer, The Independent, LIFE, Fortune, The New Yorker, Newsweek, Paris Match, The Sunday Times, and many more. 


Over his decades-long career spanning the editorial, journalistic, and fine art realms, Gamble has photographed such illustrious figures as Stephen Hawking and the Dalai Lama with several of his portraits included in the permanent collections of the National Portrait Gallery in London and the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC. In 1987, Gamble won the Kodak Award for Best Photographer in Europe as well as a World Press Photo Award in 1988 for his portrait of Stephen Hawking, which was featured as the notable cover of Hawking’s A Brief History of Time.


In 1988 Sotheby’s New York hosted one of the most talked-about auctions of the decade, the sale of the Estate of Andy Warhol. In addition to paintings and sculpture, some of the most hotly sought- after items were Warhol’s personal effects, including, décor, clothing, and even his 1974 Rolls-Royce Silver Shadow. The goal of the sale was to raise funds for the then fledgling Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. 


Soon after Warhol’s death photographer David Gamble was permitted access to Warhol’s East 66th street House, Factory and Warehouse. There, he captured the placement of Warhol’s belongings as the artist had lived with them over the years. Rather than simply documenting the space, Gamble’s careful still-lifes capture the humanity and fierce individuality of the artist. 

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