
Andy Warhol Museum Makes the Perfect Food Bank Donation for Late Artist's Birthday
By Mustafa GatollariUpdated Jan. 18 2019, 12:17 p.m. ET
Andy Warhol and Pablo Picasso are the two most important artists of the 20th Century.
Important’s an easy word to throw around, but Picasso and Warhol affected, influenced, and inspired so many people that they actually deserve the compliment.
Warhol, a Renaissance man who wrote a: A Novel, one of the most celebrated books of his time, directed critically-acclaimed films, gave captivating interviews, and carefully constructed a persona that fascinated everyone, was mostly recognized for his “Pop Art” paintings.
And out of all his paintings, his "Campbell’s Soup Cans" are probably his most recognized work.
We’ve seen them everywhere in all different shapes, colors, and sizes. Why a painting of a soup can would matter to anyone seems a bit crazy, but Warhol’s ability to capture and comment on the times he was living in was uncanny. It’s the reason why so much of his work defied explanation, and why it received such widespread praise.
And even though it’s been 31 years since the death of Andy Warhol, the artist is still celebrating his birthday.
Well, the museum dedicated to his legacy is anyway.
The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh celebrated what would have been the artist’s 90th birthday by donating 90 cases of Campbell’s soup to the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank.
The act was equal parts charity, art, and celebration of Andy’s life.
The food bank’s Chief Advancement Officer thought the act was classic Andy.
“He grew up in a working-class family, and he was really committed to challenging the system every day,” Traci Weatherford-Brown told WTAE.Traci also says that although the cheeky donation is making headlines for its obvious homage to the late painter, it was a “stunt” with practical and meaningful implications.
“We know that one in seven of our neighbors — including one in five children in southwest Pennsylvania — are food-insecure, meaning that they sometimes struggle with where their next meal is going to come from. That is a stress they carry with them every day.”A lot has been said on the extent of Warhol’s impact on art and culture.
An Artsy article calls Warhol “arguably America’s best-known artist” and looking at his body of work, it’s difficult to argue that he isn’t.
Writer Peter Wollen summed up Warhol’s “Renaissance-man-ness,” explaining why he was so much more than just a “pop painter”:
Art Historian Robert Rosenblum also argues that the work produced by Warhol between 1962 and 1987 is pretty much the best way for people to understand what was going on in that time period.
But even if you wanted to just appreciate the man’s art, then you totally could, because it’s amazing.
Damn, he's good.
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