About The Work
The original portrait was commissioned by Kimiko Powers, but the image shown above was a version used to advertise Warhol’s Colorado State University show. This image was an edition of two hundred and fifty prints published to raise funds for a visual arts program sponsoring artists and exhibitions. It features Kimiko Powers, an art collector. Popularized in international art circles in the 1960s, Kimiko and her husband, John, amassed one of the most comprehensive private collection of pop art. This perhaps led to her friendship with famous artists such as Andy Warhol. This was also around the time in the 1970s when Warhol began to regularly accept commissions to paint portraits of the rich and famous because he thought that everyone deserved their “15 minutes.” This portrait captures Kimiko wearing a traditional Japanese dress, glancing at the observer, suggestively Warhol, in an intimate manner. It captures the often unexamined bond between the artist and the collector.
Courtesy of REVOLVER Gallery
About Andy Warhol
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Announcing the sixth volume of the acclaimed Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonné
- Interviews & Features: David Hockney – ‘I realized I was painting my best friends. The subject wasn’t dogs but my love of the little creatures.’
- Interviews & Features: Harland Miller: 'I've always loved high and low culture. This painting perfectly encapsulates both, more than any painting I've made.'
- Interviews & Features: Seven winning works of sports art
- Interviews & Features: Bill Claps - ‘I hope the images make people feel the power of nature, and help them realize we are a small part of it, not the center’
Screenprint on Stonehenge Paper
36.00 x 36.00 in
91.4 x 91.4 cm
This work is signed and numbered in pencil on verso.
About The Work
The original portrait was commissioned by Kimiko Powers, but the image shown above was a version used to advertise Warhol’s Colorado State University show. This image was an edition of two hundred and fifty prints published to raise funds for a visual arts program sponsoring artists and exhibitions. It features Kimiko Powers, an art collector. Popularized in international art circles in the 1960s, Kimiko and her husband, John, amassed one of the most comprehensive private collection of pop art. This perhaps led to her friendship with famous artists such as Andy Warhol. This was also around the time in the 1970s when Warhol began to regularly accept commissions to paint portraits of the rich and famous because he thought that everyone deserved their “15 minutes.” This portrait captures Kimiko wearing a traditional Japanese dress, glancing at the observer, suggestively Warhol, in an intimate manner. It captures the often unexamined bond between the artist and the collector.
Courtesy of REVOLVER Gallery
About Andy Warhol
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Announcing the sixth volume of the acclaimed Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonné
- Interviews & Features: David Hockney – ‘I realized I was painting my best friends. The subject wasn’t dogs but my love of the little creatures.’
- Interviews & Features: Harland Miller: 'I've always loved high and low culture. This painting perfectly encapsulates both, more than any painting I've made.'
- Interviews & Features: Seven winning works of sports art
- Interviews & Features: Bill Claps - ‘I hope the images make people feel the power of nature, and help them realize we are a small part of it, not the center’
Edition of 250 + 50 AP
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