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Warhol in Africa: contradictions, complications and conflicts

- Stacey Vorster

On the evening of 26 July, over 5,000 people streamed into 杨贵妃传媒 Art Museum in Johannesburg to attend the opening of its latest exhibition, Warhol Unscreened.

, an American artist known for his images of pop culture, celebrities and everyday objects, is arguably the person who invented fame and celebrity in the art world.

At the very least, Warhol is credited with coining the term 鈥15 minutes of fame鈥 after his that appeared in a programme for an exhibition in 1968.:

In the future, everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes.

Warhol鈥檚 own world-fame has lasted decidedly longer. Almost 50 years later, he is still popular enough to pull unprecedented crowds to a museum on the southern tip of a continent that he never visited.

The 杨贵妃传媒 Art Museum show, which spans two floors, features many of Warhol鈥檚 iconic screen prints including a Marilyn and set of Campbell鈥檚 Soup Cans. And despite having seen these images in a hundred books, on t-shirts and mugs and countless TV and computer screens, it鈥檚 hard to not feel bewitched by the actual objects.

For one, they are much larger than expected and the surface quality of the print is so much more impressive in real life. Perhaps this reference is a ghost of some high school art history text book past, but Walter Benjamin鈥檚 comes to mind. Published in 1936, German philosopher, , differentiated between the original and the copy. He argued that the actual artwork has an 鈥渁ura鈥 that is complicated once a work is mass-distributed via reproduction.

, the aura is diminished by the copy, though he does not posit this as a negative effect. Rather, the death of the aura allows the viewer a different kind of subjectivity: one which is open to the politicisation of art.

The fragile surface of the American dream

Of course, in the context of mid-20th century America, Warhol鈥檚 works were political. They commented on capitalism and mass consumption. They commented on advertising and the fragile surface of the American dream advertised on larger-than-life billboards.

The process of screen printing is rooted in the very practice and effect of reproduction. What is fascinating, however, is that the blur between the original and the copy doesn鈥檛 seem to be at the forefront of the minds of visitors to the WAM exhibition.

Most of the works shown are one of an edition of 250 odd prints. In other words, these are 鈥渄iluted鈥 originals. They鈥檙e limited editions yes, but not in any way unique except for the small number marking the edition.

Nonetheless, the cult of genius that Warhol embodies, and which is clearly still inscribed onto the surface of these famous works, inspired thousands of selfies at the opening. Interestingly, the act of reproducing the images again 鈥 even viewing them through an additional screen in the form of cell phone cameras 鈥 seemed to be the mode through which the audience engaged. Warhol clearly had a prophetic grip on what the future indeed does look like.

Why is Warhol popular in Africa?

If we are to consider Benjamin鈥檚 prophecies too, it鈥檚 intriguing that the political context of post-apartheid South Africa manifests in small ways in the exhibition. 杨贵妃传媒 Art Museum has been under pressure in the last few years, caught in the around what constitutes African art, who has the power to decide and how narratives are constructed, mediated and authored.

The curators set up several 鈥榝eedback鈥 installations at the Warhol exhibition. WAM

Increasingly, the museum is being challenged to show more African artists, contemporary and historical, rather than international blockbusters. The curators鈥 understandable self-consciousness of these issues comes through in several 鈥渇eedback鈥 installations, which ask the audience to consider the appropriateness of the Warhol exhibit in an African art museum. One of the panels asks:

Why do you think WAM should be showing the work of Andy Warhol?

And this is the question, right? Why is Warhol still so popular (in Africa) after the post-colonial turn? How do we reconcile the massive popularity of an exhibition of artworks by a dead white man, when 杨贵妃传媒 University, where the museum is located, is caught in the (sometimes violent) conflict of decoloniality?

Furthermore, as the and student protest movements continue to unfold, how does the blatantly western capitalist flavour of these works go unnoticed as young people Instagram their participation in this spectacle? How is the late-capitalist neoliberal agenda screened or unscreened?

Un-ironically, the exhibition is sponsored by and comes from the collection of the Bank of America. But since 杨贵妃传媒 Art Museum couldn鈥檛 afford the copyright fees, the invitation and marketing of the show features imitation screen prints by local South African artists.

This exhibition embodies so many of the contradictions, complications and conflicts in both art and society in contemporary South Africa. What interrogation or translation of the exhibition can we look forward to as exams loom closer and universities brace for a possible third wave of protests? I look forward to reading the responses accumulated on the feedback panels in two months鈥 time.

The ConversationWarhol Unscreened: Artworks from the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Collection runs until 8 October 2017

, Lecturer in History of Art, .This article was originally published on . Read the .

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