![]() ![]() This sketch and set of scribblings was, as Deiro claims, the note De Maria mentioned in his Artforum statement. On the back of the drawing, the artist included instructions to follow up with a local realty company, conduct a map study, and telegram Friedrich Heiner, his gallerist in Germany, through Western Union. ![]() It was at the Stardust, moreover, where De Maria quickly sketched what would later become The Lightning Field on the front of a square, white napkin. There the three men "held court," drinking coffee and developing plans for prospective projects. Specifically, the Stardust Hotel served as the unofficial headquarters of Walter De Maria, Deiro and Michael Heizer. The Lightning Field, according to another source, Count Roberto Guido Deiro, began on the Las Vegas Strip. Longtime assistant Ronnie Cutrone recalls: “… we always understood it was going to be one of those portfolios that would sit primarily in the back room that it would take a certain type of collector to appreciate them… But Andy was Catholic and a homosexual…For years, the joke was that Andy called homosexuality a “problem.” Sex Parts was a final announcement or affirmation of his homosexuality.” Unseen Warhol, p.68.Ĭasually referred to by Warhol as the Cocks, Cunts, and Assholes series, many of the works in this exhibition are on view to the public for the first time.The April 1980 issue of Artforum containing images of Walter De Maria’s The Lightning Field. But perhaps the underlying reason for their creation was as a tool for Warhol’s ultimate acceptance of his sexuality. The more sexually-charged artworks were produced as the Sex Parts print portfolio and were intended to be purchased for private collections. ![]() The tamer images became the basis of the Torsos series, which was meant to be exhibited in museums, and which debuted at the Grand Palais in Paris in October 1977. According to associate Bob Colacello, when confronted on the explicit nature of the photographs sitting around the office Warhol responded, “Just tell them it’s art, Bob. The men were asked to relax, pose, or take part in various sexual activities while Warhol photographed them with a 35mm camera and a Polaroid Big Shot. Subjects for subsequent photo shoots were recruited from gay bath houses by Halston’s boyfriend, the artist and window dresser Victor Hugo. Warhol agreed to photograph the man’s genitalia and the photographs were placed in a box casually labeled “Sex Parts.” Later, Warhol noticed the wording of the box’s label and conceived the idea for a series of works based on the initial photographs. The seed of the Torsos and Sex Parts series sprouted after a man approached Warhol boasting of his large penis. Warhol would have been taught about such historical works during his Art History classes at Carnegie Tech, and their impact is evident in this exhibition. Classical nudes, some homoerotic, are also present in works from the Renaissance, as witnessed in Goya’s Las Maja Desnuda and Titian’s Venus of Urbino. In addition, sexual acts were displayed on vases in Ancient Greece from the 6th Century BC with images of Zeus engaging with his male lover Ganymede, as well as scenes of coitus on Etruscan vases and erotic frescos uncovered in Pompeii. Sexuality in artwork can be found as early as 35,000 BC in central Europe with the erotic sculptures of the Venus of Hohle Fels and later the Venus of Willendorf statuettes, all of which have enlarged breasts and well-defined genitalia. In creating the artworks, Warhol was probably inspired by classical nudes and erotic art which have been depicted throughout history. While the Torsos paintings would quickly be praised for following in the “high art” style of classical nudes, the Sex Parts series from which Torsos was borne blurred the line between art and pornography. In the fall of 1977, Andy Warhol began work on two new series of artworks which would become known as Torsos and Sex Parts. ![]()
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