Bellevue shows the body of a suicide slumped on the pavement, surrounded by police officers and hospital staff. Death was an important theme to Andy Warhol in the early ‘60s, when he also created his paintings of road traffic and airplane accidents, and scenes of the electric chair. Warhol based Bellevue on a newspaper photo. The image was printed onto the canvas fourteen times in a four-column grid. Warhol used the silkscreen process to directly transfer the photographic image to the canvas. His working method was intentionally imprecise; because some of the images overlap, each one is slightly different. Warhol found the silkscreen technique ideally suited to creating art in a relatively neutral, impersonal manner. By repeating images, Warhol intended to show life as it is – no less tragic or more sensational than the everyday news that confronts us.
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. c/o Pictoright Amsterdam/Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam

Makers

Collection

Other

Production date

1963

Library

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Dimensions

210.5 x 210.8cm.

Material

silkscreen ink and acrylic on canvas

Object number

A 37145

Credits

verworven met steun van de Vereniging Rembrandt / acquired with the generous support of the Vereniging Rembrandt

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