Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Monroe portraits expose the darker side of the ‘ – Fast Company

Posted: April 20, 2022 at 10:25 am

If you remember the 60s, you werent really there. This famous quip says much about our rose-tinted nostalgia for the decade. The fun-loving hedonism of Woodstock and Beatlemania may be etched into cultural memory, but Andy Warhols Marilyn Monroe portraits reveal a darker side to the swinging 60s that turns our nostalgia on its head.

Warhols iconic Marilyn Monroe portrait Shot Sage Blue Marilyn, due to go on sale at Christies in May, is expected to fetch record-breaking bids of $200 million (153 million), making it the most expensive 20th century artwork ever auctioned. Nearly 60 years after they were first created, Warhols portraits of the ill-fated Hollywood star continue to fascinate us.

According to Alex Rotter, Christies chairman for 20th and 21st century art, Warhols Marilyn is the absolute pinnacle of American Pop and the promise of the American dream, encapsulating optimism, fragility, celebrity and iconography all at once.

Hollywood stars were great sources of inspiration for the Pop art movement. Monroe was a recurring motif, not only in the work of Warhol but in the work of his contemporaries, including James Rosenquists Marilyn Monroe, I and Pauline Botys Colour Her Gone and The Only Blonde in the World.

Born Norma Jeane Mortenson but renamed Marilyn Monroe by 20th Century Fox, the actress went on to become one of the most illustrious stars of Hollywood history, famed for her roles in classic films like Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Some Like It Hot. She epitomized the glitzy world of consumerism and celebrity that Pop artists thought was emblematic of 1950s and 1960s American culture.

While Rotters statement may be true to some extent, there is also a sinister edge to the Marilyns because many were produced in the months following her unexpected death in 1962. On the surface, the works may look like a tribute to a much-loved icon, but themes of death, decay, and even violence lurk within these canvases. Clues can often be found in the production techniques. One of the collections most famous pieces, Marilyn Diptych, uses flaws from the silkscreen process to create the effect of a decaying portrait. Warhols The Shot Marilyns consists of four canvases shot through the forehead with a single bullet. In this, the creation of Warhols art is as important as the artwork itself.

At a glance, the surface level glamour of Warhols Marilyn immortalizes the actress as a blonde bombshell of Hollywoods bygone era. It is easy to forget the tragedy behind the image, yet part of our enduring fascination with Marilyn Monroe is her tragedy.

Her mental health struggles, her tempestuous personal life, and the mystery surrounding her death have been well documented in countless biographies, films, and television shows, including Netflixs documentary The Mystery of Marilyn Monroe: The Unheard Tapes and upcoming biopic Blonde. She epitomizes the familiar narrative of the tragic icon that is doomed to keep repeating itselfsomething that Warhol understood all too well after surviving a shooting by Valerie Solanas in 1968.

The death at the heart of Warhols Marilyns is not just rooted in grief but is also a reflection of the wider cultural landscape. The 1960s was a remarkably dark period in 20th century American history. A brief look at the context in which Warhol was producing these images reveals a decade plagued by a series of traumatic events.

Life Magazine published violent photographs of the Vietnam War. Television broadcasts exposed shocking police brutality during civil rights marches. America was shaken by the assassinations of John F Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr. Footage of JFKs death captured by bystander Abraham Zapruder was repeatedly broadcast on television. Celebrated Hollywood stars were dying young and in tragic circumstances, from Marilyn Monroe and Judy Garland to Jayne Mansfield and Sharon Tate.

President John F Kennedy in the limousine in Dallas, Texas, minutes before his assassination. [Photo: Walt Cisco/Dallas Morning News/Wiki Commons]This image of the 1960s is echoed by the postmodern theorist Fredric Jameson, who describes the decade as a virtual nightmare and a historical and countercultural bad trip. Stars like Monroe were not as flawless as they may appear in Warhols portraits, but were notorious cases of burnout and self-destruction.

Warhol understood this more than anyone. His Death and Disaster series explores the spectacle of death in America and affirms the 1960s as a time of anxiety, terror and crisis. The series consists of a vast collection of silkscreened photographs of real-life disasters including car crashes, suicides, and executions taken from newspapers and police archives. Famous deaths are also a central theme of the series, including portraits of Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, and Jackie Kennedy all of whom are associated with significant deaths or near-death experiences.

Death and Disaster came about in 1962 when Warhols collaborator Henry Geldzahler suggested that the artist should stop producing affirmation of life and instead explore the dark side of American culture.

He handed Warhol a copy of the New York Daily News, which led to the first disaster painting 129 Die in Jet!.

The recent hype around the auctioning of the Marilyn portrait reveals as much about our time as it does about our nostalgia for the 1960s. We choose to remember the decade in all its glorious technicolor, but uncovering its darker moments provides room for reconsideration. Perhaps Warhols Marilyn is not just a symbol of the swinging 60s, but an artifact from a time that was as turbulent and uncertain as our own.

Harriet Fletcher is an Associate Lecturer in English and History at Lancaster University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Andy Warhol's Marilyn Monroe portraits expose the darker side of the ' - Fast Company

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