How Warhol uses the acids on copper based metals brings out a variety of different tones which contrast and compliment with one another. I find these pieces fascinating to look at as they show so much movement and I notice something different every time I look at them intriguing me.
In
the late 1970s and early 1980s, Andy Warhol focused for the first time
on the exploration of abstraction. While paintings he made in the 1960s
with repeated blocks of imagery forming a patterned surface—and even
some early experiments in the 1950s suggest a certain abstraction—his
abstract works in the late ’70s and ’80s have no discernable
representational imagery. With these paintings, often created in large
series that included mural-sized works, the artist dives into the beauty
and mood of color and texture in a way he had not done before. Yet,
Warhol’s delving into abstraction is not without coy references and
plays between what’s real and what’s abstract. For example, the Shadows series are abstract paintings of what is ostensibly a “real” shadow.
In December 1977 Warhol began the Oxidations,
iridescent canvases made up of coppery yellows, oranges and greens.
Surprisingly, the only paint used by the artist in this very “painterly”
work was the metallic copper background. Warhol invited friends and
acquaintances to urinate onto a canvas covered in metallic paint in
order to cause oxidation. The uric acid reacted with the copper in the
paint, removing components of the pure metal to form mineral salts. Some
colors developed immediately while others like blue and green formed
later on top of the red or brown copper oxides. Warhol and his
collaborators experimented with both pattern and coloration by using a
variety of metallic background paints and by varying the maker’s fluid
and food intake. Critics have made numerous comparisons between the Oxidation series and Jackson Pollack’s famous drip paintings from the 1940s and early 1950s
Read more at warhol.org: http://www.warhol.org/education/resourceslessons/Oxidations-and-Abstraction/#ixzz40kM7flJI
Taken From : http://www.warhol.org/education/resourceslessons/Oxidations-and-Abstraction/
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These pieces link in a strong way to the work I have already been doing along with my theme and I feel that taking inspiration from these pieces in the future may benefit my work as working in his style may add another element to a piece which may otherwise end up being quite boring to look at.
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