Andy Warhol: Little Electric Chairs
May 2 - June 25, 2016
Opening: Monday, May6 2nd, 6:00 - 8:00 pm
VENUS
980 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10075
(New York, NY) – VENUS is pleased to present Andy Warhol: Little Electric Chairs, an exhibition of eighteen important paintings from one of Warhol’s most significant and influential series of the 1960s, Death and Disaster.
With the Death and Disaster series, Warhol explored the growing mass media’s exploitation of tragic imagery in post-war America. The advent of celebrity culture and introduction of the television as a household object in the post-war era changed the way information circulated. Graphic, violent imagery—both gruesome and controversial—saw widespread broadcast for the first time with photographs of race riots, suicides, criminals, car crashes and worse. Warhol refers to this phenomenon directly with the Little Electric Chairs, a series whose source was a news wire service image from January 13, 1953 announcing the historic death sentences of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg at Sing Sing Correctional Facility in upstate New York. Warhol began producing Electric Chair paintings in 1963—the same year that capital punishment was banned in the state, and the chair carried out New York’s final execution.
By their repetition in irreverent colors ranging from hot pink to silver, Warhol transforms the once unsettling image of the chair into a visual perversion of the mass media’s exploitation of graphic imagery and the public’s ultimate desensitization to such material. In his essay on the series, Gerard Malanga credited Warhol with saying that “[a]dding pretty colors to a picture as gruesome as this would change people’s perceptions of acceptance.” The artist’s reduction of the so-called “Sing Sing Death Chamber” to an endlessly recurring image subverts the chair’s meaning. Regarded as one of his most important contributions to the Pop Art movement, Warhol’s Electric Chairs reveal the banality that can attenuate even a topic as tragic as capital punishment.
Produced between 1964 and 1965, all of the works in the series are identical in size and subject matter though each silkscreen is unique in its color and ink saturation. Taking place in a smaller, modified space within the gallery, the exhibition at VENUS will pay homage to the inaugural presentation of the works that took place at the Jerrold Morris International Gallery in Toronto in March of 1965.
For further information about the exhibition and availability, please contact the gallery at info@venusovermanhattan.com
For all press inquiries related to the exhibition, please contact Prentice Cultural Communications by e-mail at bettina@prenticeart.com, or nicole@prenticeart.com; or by telephone at + 1 (212) 228-4048
Warhol is known for his Marilyns and Campbell’s Soup Cans, but his most disturbing and profound effort was undoubtedly the “Death and Disaster” series of the 1960s.
Right now the New York gallery world is awash in what are often called museum-quality shows.
Venus Over Manhattan will show “Little Electric Chairs”, a collection of eighteen paintings from Andy Warhol’s “Death and Disaster” series.
Venus Over Manhattan has opened an Andy Warhol show, just in time for Frieze.
An important part of Andy Warhol’s seminal “Death and Disaster” series—which also includes suicides, race riots and car crashes—the electric chair paintings were based on a news image of the deadly electric chair that was used to execute Julius and Ethel Rosenberg at New York’s Sing Sing Correctional Facility in 1953.