Who Was Andy Warhol, Really?
If you passed Andy Warhol on the street today, you’d instantly recognize him. The late artist’s white, bowl-cut wigs and extra large specs are just as noticeable as his pop-art canvases. Yet, he was a deliberately mysterious figure who rarely shared details of his personal life. “I just do art because I’m ugly and there’s nothing else for me to do,” Warhol would tell reporters. A new Netflix docuseries releasing today, The Andy Warhol Diaries, aims to further delve into the influential artist’s mind.
Directed by Andrew Rossi and produced by Ryan Murphy, the new six-part series is based on the personal memoirs of Warhol that were posthumously-published back in 1989. Through narration—using Warhol’s own words and voice, which was re-created with AI technology—the series aims to offer a better understanding of Warhol’s work, and what the artist grappled with personally behind the scenes. Through the decades, especially at his height during the ‘60s and ’70s, a clear theme emerges: That Warhol, a lover of all things fame and high-society, used glamour in his work as a decoy.
Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to a devout Catholic mother, the new docuseries suggests that Warhol’s traditional upbringing caused him to bear a sense of shame around his queer identity. Having never had the opportunity to be a proudly out gay man, his work as an adult began reflecting the life he wanted to live. Celebrity, glitz, and excess were all things that he secretly desired for himself, as someone who often had to live in the shadows. As his artwork began to get noticed by critics and journalists, Warhol moved through New York’s upper echelon, but still remained in the closet (at the time, it was still frowned-upon, and often unsafe, to be LGBTQ+). “Everyone knows he’s gay, but he’s the right kind of gay—he’s not the out-in-the-streets kind of gay,” says artist Glenn Ligon in the series.
When he became famous, Warhol really began using his fashion choices as a means of deflection and survival. “That idea of shame is very much part of Warhol’s personal narrative,” says Jessica Beck, curator of the Warhol Museum. “This idea of covering and transforming physically—he used it to shield himself from criticism.” Patrick Moore, the director of the Warhol Museum, adds, “For a gay guy, if you’re not going to be the stud, you might as well be the freak. Drag queens have taught us this for a long time: You’re not going to beat me up, because I’m going to dress up.” He mostly wore sleek turtlenecks and sharp suits and ties, something the doc alludes to him attempting to “pass” for straight. But it was his cartoony wigs and glasses that served as his true armor.
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