Images above:
Left: No Title, Andy Warhol, 1967. Tate, purchased 1971. © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 2025/ Licensed by DACS, London. Photo: Tate
Right: Self-Portrait, Andy Warhol, 1986. Tate, presented by Janet Wolfson de Botton, 1996. © The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 2025/ Licensed by DACS, London. Photo: Tate
One Night with Marilyn
Many of us will be familiar with Warhol’s iconic Campbell’s Soup Cans, but out of the many works on display in the exhibition, which should visitors pay special attention to? “I think the Marilyns are the most famous and definitely the most recognisable. There are not many artists in the world who've had the way that they make work turned into an iPhone app!
“For me, the most interesting are some of the quieter works. We’re really lucky to have some Polaroid self-portraits in the show. Obviously he made all the works, but the Polaroids in particular seem close to him, because he sat right in front of that camera and that light was captured on that substrate. So they are the ones I find most personally moving.”
A big challenge for the team is how to decide which works to exhibit from such a vast collection. According to the Andy Warhol Foundation, he produced roughly 9,000 paintings and sculptures, nearly 12,000 drawings and 19,000 prints!
“The collection of Warhols comes from ARTIST ROOMS, which is a national collection, cared for between Tate and the National Gallery of Scotland. They actually have around twice as many Warhols as are on display here.