Review: Andy Warhol Polaroids 1958-1987 by Richard B Woodward & Ruel Golden

American artist Andy Warhol found fame from transforming the everyday into art. His portrait of Campbell's Soup Cans still garner much attention today. He was also unafraid to use and try multiple different mediums to capture the everyday and the mundane and one of his favourite tools was a polaroid camera. In Andy Warhol polaroids the authors compile an interesting collection of Warhol's photographs, many of them featuring the rich and famous that surrounded him at the factory. There is also a lot of discussion on Warhol's style, a brief but comprehensive biography of his career and glimpses of insight into life at the Factory.

This was a striking, well put together book that I found myself flicking through over the space of about a week. (As is often the case with art books, I preferred not to read it all at once so I could feel the full impact.) Warhol fans will no doubt enjoy the selection of polaroids and it is an interesting, though perhaps not groundbreaking, Warhol book to have in my collection.

Recommended.

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