A new exhibit at the Whitney focuses on Andy Warhol's social and personal life
Briefly

A new exhibit at the Whitney focuses on Andy Warhol's social and personal life
"Warhol's 'Family Album' is a fascinating visual diary of the ordinary stuff of life-meals, people and places-but with a Warholian sheen of who's-who: art, celebrity, fashion, business, and power."
"Some are gorgeous photographs in their own right; some are basically outtakes. Together they are an intimate, immersive time capsule of this glamorous world of the early 1970s."
The Whitney Museum of American Art will present 'Andy Warhol: Family Album,' featuring 732 Polaroid photographs taken by Warhol between 1972 and 1973. The exhibition focuses on Warhol's social and personal life, drawn from one of six Holson albums he assembled. The photographs include images of friends, his dog Archie, and European vacations, reflecting Warhol's ability to capture everyday life. The exhibit offers a visual diary of the early 1970s, blending ordinary moments with elements of art, celebrity, and power. It will be on display until October 19.
Read at Time Out New York
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]