community + cultural info


The Andy Warhol Museum Announces Summer Exhibitions, Keith Edmier and
Farrah
Fawcett and The American Supermarket

(Pittsburgh, PA) . . . May 20, 2003...This summer, The Andy Warhol
Museum is
presenting numerous special exhibitions and programs under the banner
of
"Summer of Andy"- a celebration of the fact that August 6, 2003 would
have
been Andy Warhol's 75th birthday. Three exhibitions, Where is Elvis?,
Douglas Gordon: Blind Star and Too Hot to Handle: Creating Controversy
Through Political Cartoons open in June with an opening event on
Saturday,
June 14. Next up are two more special exhibitions, Keith Edmier and
Farrah
Fawcett and The American Supermarket. Both exhibitions will be on view
July
13 through October 5, 2003 with an opening event on Saturday, July 12.

Keith Edmier and Farrah Fawcett
The exhibition, Keith Edmier and Farrah Fawcett, examines the
connection
between artist and muse through a series of collaborative sculptures
and
photographs by contemporary artist, Keith Edmier, and actress and
artist,
Farrah Fawcett. Produced by Art Production Fund, the exhibition
features the
results of a two-year collaboration between the artists, spurred by
Edmier's
childhood admiration of Fawcett.

Collaboration
Since her 1976 debut in the television series Charlie's Angels, actress
Farrah Fawcett has played the role of the ideal woman and muse for many
men.
For Edmier, Fawcett was a particularly resonant figure of youthful
admiration and inspiration because he knew she herself was an artist.
Edmier
first contacted Fawcett with the hope of inviting her into a
collaborative
project. With only a vague idea of how such a project would take shape,
Edmier wrote in his original proposal, "In the very broadest terms, I
would
like to propose making a portrait of Ms. Fawcett...with her ideas and
concerns about the piece directly influencing its final form."

In August 2000, the project began with the idea of a sculpture of
Fawcett,
but encouraged by Edmier, she decided to make a portrait of him as
well.
Ultimately, they produced what would be the centerpiece of Keith Edmier
and
Farrah Fawcett, a reclining female in marble and a standing male in
bronze,
both life-size. Fawcett's active role in the creation of art for the
project
threw into question distinctions between inspiration and collaboration,
artist and muse. Rather than standing in as Edmier's independently
powerful
muse who facilitated creation, Fawcett participated in and directly
influenced the process.

The Exhibition
The centerpiece of the exhibition, Keith Edmier and Farrah Fawcett
2000,
includes a pair of nude sculptures the artists made of each other. Both
life-size, a reclining Fawcett is rendered in white marble; a standing
Edmier in bronze.  In the sculptures, the artists are depicted less as
themselves than as ideals. Edmier's boyish good looks are enhanced and
Fawcett has not aged since her 1976 television debut. In reinventing
the
image of Fawcett that was so crucial to his youth, Edmier shifts the
narrative of his past from first to third person, unhooking it from
autobiography. But by providing a grown-up Edmier as mate to a 1970s
Fawcett, the collaboration sustains the original fantasy, suggesting
that
past is never wholly resolved.

In addition to the sculptures of Keith Edmier and Farrah Fawcett 2000,
the
exhibition include five small sculptures, a group of black and white
photographs by the collaborators, and two color photographs: a close-up
of
Fawcett's hand touching her hair, and The Space Between You and Me, a
digital photograph that shows Fawcett leaning her forehead against
Edmier's.
What at first glance looks like a romantic image, on closer inspection
becomes a sort of pieta. Edmier and Fawcett clearly had this theme in
mind
when they juxtaposed the photograph beside an image of Michelangelo's
Pieta
Rondanini (1555-64).

The Artists
Fawcett's interest in art began early in life and continued during the
late
1960s at the University of Texas at Austin, where she was an art major.
The
professor who encouraged her efforts made large-scale religious
sculptures
for churches, so her training was mainly in classical techniques. Over
the
years, Fawcett has continued to make sculpture, paint and draw.

Edmier was born in Chicago in 1967, when Fawcett was at Austin. After a
brief stint at California Institute of the Arts, he left school at age
18 to
work on special effects in Hollywood. At age 24 he moved to New York
and
entered the art world. Exposed to Conceptualism during his brief tenure
at
CalArts, he began his career creating art with an emotional distance.
He
credits artists of his own generation for reminding him that it was
permissible to make art that overtly engages sentiment. Currently,
Edmier is
concerned with the impact of celebrity on the individual. He uses
himself
and his subjects as evidence in this exploration, testing ideas against
experience.

Working together, Edmier and Fawcett have held a magnifying glass to
the
connection between fantasy and reality, celebrity and fan, and created
a new
understanding of the way mass culture affects lives and shapes memory.
-more-
Keith Edmier and Farrah Fawcett was produced by Art Production Fund.
Art
Production Fund (APF), a non-profit organization devoted to helping
artists
realize difficult to produce works, has supported and organized this
entire
project from its inception. APF was co-founded in January 2000 by:
Yvonne
Force Villareal, President/Curator; and Doreen Remen, Director. This
project
would not have been possible without the support of the following APF
Sponsors: The Deerfield Foundation, Mr. Donald Keough, Mr. Louis Marx
Jr.,
and Mr. Laurance S. Rockefeller. Special thanks to Friedrich Petzel
Gallery
for their support.

The exhibition was originally conceived by Lynn Zelevansky, Curator of
Modern and Contemporary Art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.


The American Supermarket
The American Supermarket is a recreation the famous 1964 Pop Art
installation of the same name. A collaboration between the great names
of
Pop Art including Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Artschwager,
Robert
Watts, Tom Wesselman and others, the exhibition is an evocation of an
ordinary 1964 supermarket - complete with meat, cheese and fruit
counters,
neon signs and jaunty background musak. In the installation's "aisles,"
real
foods are mixed together with iconic Pop works such as Warhol's stacks
of
Campbell's Soup cans and Robert Watts' alluring chrome fruits and
multi-colored wax eggs.

The American Supermarket was recreated by the Schirn Kunsthalle
Frankfurt
for their recent exhibition, Shopping: A Century of Art and Consumer
Culture. The installation's presentation at The Warhol is the first
time it
will be seen in the United States since its sensational 1964 debut at
New
York City's Bianchini Gallery.

The driving force behind the 1964 display of The American Supermarket
was
artist Ben Birillo, partner with Paul Bianchini in the Bianchini
Gallery,
who devised the installation, approached artists and produced many of
the
works on display. Starting on October 6, 1964, Birillo staged a
weeklong
"Grand Opening" in the Gallery that mimicked the attention-grabbing and
point-of-sale promotional techniques of supermarket operators. One
thousand
buttons with turkey, apple, or soup can motifs were given away free,
while a
hot dog stand provided nourishment to the "shoppers" and art collectors
who
snapped up 'Specials' such as actual Campbell's soup cans signed by
Warhol
for only $18. A neon sign advertised Ballantine brand beer and
illuminated
signs led customers to the Egg, Fruit and Bread aisles. In the rear of
the
store, melons, apples, pears and bananas, as well as lettuce, tomatoes,
peppers, and zucchini by Robert Watts were displayed on colored paper
in
wooden crates. Twelve dollars bought customers a paper bag
silk-screened
with a Campbell's Tomato Soup motif by Warhol or a turkey motif by Roy
Lichtenstein. Fake sirloin steaks by Mary Inman went for $27. The
exhibition
attracted thousands of curious visitors and widespread press attention
including a full-color feature in Life magazine.  With its Pop Art
proprietors The American Supermarket celebrated the spectacle of
consumption
with a happening-like event in which shopping was elevated to an art
form
and serious art collectors were turned into ordinary supermarket
customers.

The Andy Warhol Museum receives state arts funding support through a
grant
from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts, a state agency funded by the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the National Endowment for the Arts, a
federal agency. The 2003 exhibition program has been supported, in
part, by
The Juliet Lea Hillman Simonds Foundation, Inc.

Located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, the place of Andy Warhol's birth,
The
Warhol is one of the most comprehensive single-artist museums in the
world.
The Andy Warhol Museum is one of the four Carnegie Museums of
Pittsburgh.
Additional information about The Warhol is available at www.warhol.org
<http://www.warhol.org/>.
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Phone:  412.237.8300
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Fri, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Mon closed
Admission: Members - free
Good Fridays - 5-10 p.m.
Adults - $8, Sr. Citizens - $7, Children/Students - $4
The Warhol Store/The Warhol Café - free





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the warhol:
Gina Frey
Communications Associate
117 Sandusky Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15212
T 412.237.8339
F 412.237.8340
E freyg@warhol.org
W www.warhol.org
W www.warholstore.com
The Andy Warhol Museum
One of the four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh
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