1960s Americana: Andy Warhol’s Fabric
Andy Warhol is the undisputed king of American Pop Art, creating some of the world’s most iconic and emblematic works of art. Multiples, seriality and repetition were key themes in his art – think Campbell’s Soup Cans or Marilyn’s face – so perhaps it’s no surprise that among his many creative ventures he turned his hand to printed textiles. Much like his art, Warhol brought the symbols of 1950s and 60s Americana into his fabric patterns, creating playful, whimsical and vibrant designs that celebrate the lighter, more frivolous side of life in America, from indulgent ice-cream sundaes to day-glo butterflies, colourful buttons and blooming flowers. As his career grew, Warhol also demonstrated a love of fabric by transforming himself into a fashion icon, one that is now forever bound to life in 1960s New York.
Warhol’s artistic career began as a freelance illustrator for a number of leading fashion and lifestyle magazines in New York City. His early illustrations demonstrated just how much he adored fashion, particularly the drawings he made in collaboration with the celebrity shoe designer I. Miller, which featured in the weekly Sunday supplement of the New York Times. Made with graphic black lines and adorned in indulgent patterns and colours, they revealed Warhol’s fascination in the way patterns and clothing could lift one above the ordinary and into a fantasy realm.
As his reputation gradually grew, Warhol’s repertoire expanded far beyond illustration into a wide pool of disciplines including printmaking, photography, film and more. He was famously indiscriminate, never turning down an opportunity to work with someone new, and this attitude paid off well, earning Warhol a wide social circle of contacts and friends across the city. From the 1950s onwards Warhol designed a series of repeat print textiles for Fuller Fabrics which echoed the playful, whimsical quality of his illustrations, with quirky line drawings of everyday ephemera that seemed to capture and celebrate the spirit of the times, including food, household objects, flowers, insects and animals, coloured with his trademark, eye-catching artificial hues.
Even in the 1960s when Warhol’s career as a Pop artist was gathering pace, he still turned his hand to fashion, famously reproducing his iconic Campbells Soup Cans onto paper dresses which became highly desirable among New York’s socialites. Campbell’s Soup even picked up on the publicity, creating their own ‘Souper Dresses’ (made in an 80/20 blend of cellulose and cotton) featuring Warhol’s design, which anyone could buy for $1 and two soup labels. Unsurprisingly these are now collector’s items that can sell for anything between $5,500 to $25,000.
Throughout the 1960s Warhol began cultivating his own image, and his inimitable style is as instantly recognisable today as it was in his heyday – that of dark sunglasses, white blonde/silver hair, black and white clothes, smart jackets and jeans. He took this style with him to the glittering parties he frequented across New York City, including the star-studded nights at Studio 54, and his trademark look became its own form of branding, helping him sell himself as a commodity in an increasingly commercial world. In 1969 Warhol further deepened his connection to fashion by founding Interview magazine, which regularly printed articles and interview on leading designers.
Since the 1960s, Warhol’s voice has perpetually infiltrated the fashion world, through his multi-channel work as a textile designer, artist and fashion icon. In the 1980s, French fashion designer Jean Charles de Castelbajac paid tribute to Warhol with a riff on the ‘Souper Dress’, creating a dress shaped and decorated like a Campbell’s Soup Can. Just a few years later, Italian designer Gianni Versace made a dress printed with Warhol’s famous Marilyn motif as a bold repeat pattern. More recently, it is perhaps Warhol’s own brand that has endured the test of time – in 2014, Danish fashion designer Peter Jensen styled his runway models to look like Warhol, with monochrome outfits, dark glasses and short silver hair, and he is just one of many who continue to replicate Warhol’s style. All this afffirms that Warhol’s image lives on today, not just for its effortlessly cool vibe, but the way it encapsulated the spirit of the time in which he was living, a hedonistic era of glamour, indulgence and escapist fantasy.
3 Comments
phyllis Fredendall
So great to see the insect fabric. I wonder if it is possible to find more imagery of his textile designs in the Fuller Fabric archive. The energetic black outlines and tertiary yet mostly analogous hues are delightful. I wonder if they did a red-orange version…. Thanks for these. Always a treat.
Vicki Lang
The 60’s were a colorful time. Bold designs and color were very popular . Andy Warhol was a stand along character during that time. His designs were very popular. It was every where.
Rosie Lesso
Thanks! And yes you are absolutely right…