Electric Chair
1971
Warhol began using the image of the electric chair in 1963, the same year as the two final executions in New York State. Over the next decade, he repeatedly returned to the subject, reflecting the political controversy surrounding the death penalty in America in the 1960s. The chair, and its brutal reduction of life to nothingness, is given a typically deadpan presentation by Warhol.
The image of an unoccupied electric chair in an empty execution chamber becomes a poignant metaphor for death. In subsequent iterations of the electric chair image, Warhol experimented with colour and composition. In 1971 he produced a series of ten electric chair screenprints on paper. Here, the images are more tightly focused on the chair itself, such that it occupies a larger proportion of the pictorial space, and each has been printed in a bold colour such as yellow, pink, blue and orange.
Screenprint in colours, 1971, on wove paper, signed and dated in ball point pen on the reverse, numbered from the edition of 250 (there were also 50 Artist's proofs) with a rubber stamp on the reverse, printed by Silkprint Kettner, Zurich, published by Bischofberger, Zurich, with the Andy Warhol stamp on the reverse, 90.2 x 121.9 cm. (35 1/2 x 48 in.)
Feldman & Schellmann II.81
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