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Pioneer of the Pop Art movement of the 1960s who transplanted his sometimes witty, sometimes boring explorations of popular culture from the canvas to the screen. Warhol acquired a 16mm camera in 1963 and made his first "underground" film, "Kiss", the same year. It combined the deliberately nonprofessional techniques endorsed by the American avant-garde with Warhol's own camp sensibility and the ironic banality of his "serial" artwork.

Warhol's film work falls into a silent and a sound phase, the first of which reached its apex in "Sleep" (1964), a six-hour study of a slumbering man conveyed via a virtually stationary camera....


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Filmography

The Universe of Keith Haring - ( - Himself / 2008 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Karaoke Verite - ( Other(- 11th episode dedicated to Andy Warhol) / 1999 / Released / MNN )
Karaoke Verite - ( Other(- inspired by screen tests) / 1999 / Released / MNN )
Nico Icon - ( Himself / 1996 / Released / )
Jonas in the Desert - ( Himself / 1994 / Released / )
Andy Warhol: Made in China - ( / 1992 / Released / )
North Shore - ( Other(- film extract) / 1987 / Released / )
Vamp - ( Animator(- contributing artist) / 1986 / Released / )
The Look - ( / 1985 / Released / TEM Programs International )
Cocaine Cowboys - ( / 1979 / Released / International Harmony Inc )
An Unmarried Woman - ( Art Department(- art collaboration) / 1978 / Released / )
Andy Warhol's Bad - ( Executive Producer / 1976 / Released / New World Pictures )
Underground and Emigrants - ( / 1975 / Released / )
Blood For Dracula - ( Producer / 1974 / Released / CFDC )
Identikit - ( / 1974 / Released / Rizzoli Film Productions )
Andy Warhol - ( Other(- film extracts) / 1973 / Released / )
Andy Warhol's Frankenstein - ( Producer / 1973 / Released / CFDC )
Painters Painting - ( / 1973 / Released / )
Cocksucker Blues - ( / 1972 / Released / )
Dynamite Chicken - ( / 1972 / Released / EYR Productions )
Heat - ( Executive Producer / 1972 / Released / Warhol, Andy )
L' Amour - ( Director / 1972 / Released / Andy Warhol Factory )
L' Amour - ( Screenplay / 1972 / Released / Andy Warhol Factory )
Women in Revolt - ( Producer / 1971 / Released / Andy Warhol )
Imitation of Christ - ( Producer / 1970 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Trash - ( Producer / 1970 / Released / )
Diaries, Notes and Sketches - ( Himself / 1969 / Released / )
Lonesome Cowboys - ( Director / 1969 / Released / Vaughan-Rogosin )
Lonesome Cowboys - ( Producer / 1969 / Released / Vaughan-Rogosin )
Lonesome Cowboys - ( Screenplay / 1969 / Released / Vaughan-Rogosin )
Flesh - ( Producer / 1968 / Released / Vaughan-Rogosin )
The Queen - ( / 1968 / Released / )
Bike Boy - ( Director / 1967 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Bike Boy - ( Producer / 1967 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Bike Boy - ( Screenplay / 1967 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Four Stars - ( Director / 1967 / Released / Film Makers )
Four Stars - ( Producer / 1967 / Released / Film Makers )
Four Stars - ( Director of Photography / 1967 / Released / Film Makers )
Four Stars - ( Editor / 1967 / Released / Film Makers )
I, a Man - ( Director / 1967 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
I, a Man - ( Producer / 1967 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
I, a Man - ( Director of Photography / 1967 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Bufferin - ( Director / 1966 / Released / )
Bufferin - ( Himself / 1966 / Released / )
Bufferin - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1966 / Released / )
The Chelsea Girls - ( Director / 1966 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
The Chelsea Girls - ( Producer / 1966 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
The Chelsea Girls - ( Screenplay / 1966 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
The Chelsea Girls - ( Photography / 1966 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
The Velvet Underground and Nico - ( Director / 1966 / Released / )
The Velvet Underground and Nico - ( Producer / 1966 / Released / )
The Velvet Underground and Nico - ( Himself / 1966 / Released / )
Lupe - ( Director / 1965 / Released / )
Lupe - ( Producer / 1965 / Released / )
My Hustler - ( Director / 1965 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
My Hustler - ( Producer / 1965 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
My Hustler - ( Photography / 1965 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Outer and Inner Space - ( Director / 1965 / Released / )
Outer and Inner Space - ( Producer / 1965 / Released / )
Poor Little Rich Girl - ( Director / 1965 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Poor Little Rich Girl - ( Producer / 1965 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Couch - ( Director / 1964 / Released / )
Couch - ( Producer / 1964 / Released / )
Empire - ( Director / 1964 / Released / )
Empire - ( Producer / 1964 / Released / )
Harlot - ( Director / 1964 / Released / )
Harlot - ( Producer / 1964 / Released / )
Tarzan and Jane Regained... Sort of - ( Director / 1964 / Released / )
Tarzan and Jane Regained... Sort of - ( Producer / 1964 / Released / )
Blow Job - ( Director / 1963 / Released / )
Haircut (No. 1) - ( Director / 1963 / Released / )
Kiss - ( Director / 1963 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )
Kiss - ( Producer / 1963 / Released / Film-Makers Co-Operative )

TV Credits
Penn & Teller's Invisible Thread ( 1987 / Released ): Actor
Donald Duck's 50th Birthday ( 1984 / Released ): Actor
Walt Disney... One Man's Dream ( 1981 / Released ): Actor

Full Biography (Back to top)


Pioneer of the Pop Art movement of the 1960s who transplanted his sometimes witty, sometimes boring explorations of popular culture from the canvas to the screen. Warhol acquired a 16mm camera in 1963 and made his first "underground" film, "Kiss", the same year. It combined the deliberately nonprofessional techniques endorsed by the American avant-garde with Warhol's own camp sensibility and the ironic banality of his "serial" artwork.

Warhol's film work falls into a silent and a sound phase, the first of which reached its apex in "Sleep" (1964), a six-hour study of a slumbering man conveyed via a virtually stationary camera. Glacially indifferent to the question of viewer involvement, "Sleep" is not so much "watched" as it is "experienced."

Warhol was prolific in his idiosyncratic, voyeuristic brand of "cinema verite", churning out product at an assembly-line clip of roughly one film a week during the period 1964-65. He trained his camera on the motley band of freaks, musicians and social register slummers that trooped through his Felliniesque "Factory". In an ironic inversion of the Hollywood studio system, Warhol elevated the more prominent "players" into underground "superstars": the beautiful, tragic Candy Darling, Joe Dallesandro, Holly Woodlawn, Jackie Curtis, et al.

Although all of Warhol's films were governed by his peculiar sensibility, he assembled a nucleus of capable technicians, such as Paul Morrissey and Chuck Wein, who made various--uncredited--contributions, often in the master's absence.

Warhol entered his "sound phase" with "Harlot" (1965) and continued to crank out such influential films as "Vinyl" (1965), based upon Anthony Burgess's "A Clockwork Orange", which launched the tragic career and cruel exploitation of socialite/superstar Edie Sedgwick. In 1966 he produced his most enduring and definitive work, "The Chelsea Girls", a crazed showcase of Factory stalwarts which synthesized the enthusiasms and strategies encompassed by his previous work. The film was projected on two adjacent screens, each of which depicted unrelated situations. Its relative popularity ("The Chelsea Girls" was the first Warhol film to surface in "real" movie houses), inspired a more commercial, or at least less arcane, approach to filmmaking.

While such post-Chelsea Girls" films as "Lonesome Cowboys" (1969) continued to use typically Warholian alienation effects (extreme long takes, "strobe" cuts, etc.), they also relied on previously disdained qualities such as plot and characterization. By the time the Factory closed, after an attempt on Warhol's life in June of 1968, Morrissey had inserted his more formal concerns into the Warhol formula, producing a series of bizarre sex farces that proved more accessible to a popular audience (although they gradually reverted into self-parody). By the mid-1970s, Morrissey was turning out Gothic romps affixed with Warhol's brand name, although they were only vaguely indebted to the Factory style.

Though he had effectively closed the filmmaking chapter of his career after the release of "Andy Warhol's Bad" (dir. Jed Johnson, 1977), Warhol continued to satisfy his voyeuristic appetites with a Polaroid camera that he toted on his late-night revels until his untimely death in 1987.


Profession(s):
artist, filmmaker, publisher, author, illustrator
Sometimes Credited As:
Andrew Warhola
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Family
brother:John Warhola (older)
brother:Paul Warhola (born on June 26, 1922)
father:Andrej Warhola (Czech)
mother:Julia Warhola (Czech)
nephew:James Warhola
niece:Madale Warhola Hoover

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Education
Schenley High School Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Carnegie Institute of Technology BFA painting and graphics design 1949
Milestones (Back to top)

1983 Started own cable TV talk show
1977 After "Andy Warhol's Bad" (directed by Jed Johnson), ended filmmaking career (though he directed several music videos in the 1980s)
1969 Founded INTERVIEW magazine
1968 Seriously wounded after being shot twice by Valerie Solanis on June 4
1968 While Warhol recuperated, Morrissey wrote and directed "Flesh," the first "Warhol" film which Warhol did not direct
1966 Made "The Chelsea Girls," whose commercial success precipitated more mainstream projects
1965 Paul Morrissey joined Warhol's entourage
1965 Made "Vinyl," an adaptation of Anthony Burgess's "A Clockwork Orange"; also film debut of Edie Sedgwick
1965 "Produced" debut record album of "The Velvet Underground and Nico"
1964 Joined by scenarist Ronald Tevel and assistant director Chuck Wein
1964 Shot first sound film, "Harlot" (70 mins) in December
1963 Made first "serial" film, "Kiss"
1962 First one-man show in New York
1962 - 1963 Began attending underground/avant-garde film screenings
1949 Moved to New York after graduating from college
Eaarned reputation as leading illustrator through 1950s
Shot first film on trip to Los Angeles



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