ISBN-13: 9781500567309 / Angielski / Miękka / 2013 / 276 str.
ISBN-13: 9781500567309 / Angielski / Miękka / 2013 / 276 str.
The Limited Edition Gold Version is limited to only 500 collector copies bearing facsimile signatures of both the author and Warhol Superstar and collaborator Holly Woodlawn. The first half of twentieth century art belongs to Pablo Picasso, but there is no argument that the second half belongs to Andy Warhol. One of the most influential figures in modern art, Andy Warhol is instantly recognized for his Marilyn and Elvis portraits, his iconic Campbell's Soup cans, and for his blazing the trail for underground avant garde film, producing more than sixty films from 1963 to 1968. But many of these films were actually the work of filmmaker Paul Morrisey and his art mass-produced by others. Warhol's studio, known as "The Factory" was a famous gathering place that brought together distinguished intellectuals, drag queens, rock stars, transvestites, writers, artists, Bohemian street people, junkies, Hollywood celebrities and wealthy patrons. The Factory was a place where society's outcasts could mingle with the rich and famous, where legendary parties set trends and influenced popular culture, and where Warhol would create works which are now valued in the millions. But Warhol had another side, and many of those who worked with him had little respect for the man. Behind Warhol the artist and filmmaker were many people who sacrificed their own careers and even their lives to bring Warhol the notoriety he gained throughout his relentless pursuit for fame. In The Real King of Pop, Warhol historian and collector Michael Malott compiles his years of researching Andy's life and works and interviewing those who knew and worked with Warhol into an extensive biography on this legendary, aloft and often misunderstood individual.