Mrs. Warhol
by Andy Warhol
Friday, May 12, 2017
Atlanta Contemporary | 7:00 pm
$8 admission / $5 for Contemporary supporters with ID
A little-noticed fact: for twenty years, including the 1960s period in which
he helped invent pop art and presided over New York's most notorious social
scene, Andy Warhol lived with his mother. Just in time for Mother's Day, Film
Love screens Andy's 1966 portrait film of Julia Warhola, Mrs. Warhol.
However much Andy Warhol downplayed his working-class family roots in
Pittsburgh, even less known is that this highly American-identified artist and
his brothers were the first generation of his family to be born in the United
States. His parents, Julia and Ondrej Warhola, were immigrants from the
Austro-Hungarian empire, in a region that is now Eastern Slovakia. Ondrej died
when Andy was a teenager; in 1952, as Andy began to establish himself as a
successful commercial artist in New York, Julia moved to the city to be with
him. They lived together until 1972 when Julia moved back to Pittsburgh.
Andy's portrait film Mrs. Warhol was made in 1966, at the height of
his filmmaking activity. Situated in the family kitchen in Warhol's Lexington
Avenue townhouse, the septuagenarian Julia improvises in the role of an aging
movie star with a dark past, bantering with her current husband (played by
Richard Rheem) amidst the unspoken possibility that he might meet the same fate
as her previous, now deceased, husbands.
Several real-life details
underlie this melodramatic scenario. Though Julia retained her family name
Warhola, Andy had long ago dropped the final "a" from his own name. The film’s
title, Mrs. Warhol, thus introduces a subtext about the relationship
between family origins and public self-reinvention. Complicating things further
is Warhol’s decision to cast young Richard Rheem – who was at the time Warhol's
lover – as Mrs. Warhol's husband, further muddying the waters of familial (and
self) identification.
Customarily for Warhol's cinema, Mrs. Warhol
is built from two unbroken, improvised thirty-three minute takes. In the
second half, the characters are largely dropped and Julia and Richard Rheem
interact with each other tenderly, within the domestic space all three then
shared. Richard gets Julia to open up about her European life and her early
years in the U.S., while Julia patiently teaches Richard to iron his shirt.
Poised on a playful line between documentary of unspoken relationships and the
revealing artifice of self-invention, Mrs. Warhol is a poignant tribute to Julia
and to motherhood, and a comparatively rare disclosure of Warhol’s feelings on
the sustenance and the trials of family relationships.
Mrs.
Warhol (Andy Warhol, 1966, 67 minutes)
Atlanta Contemporary
535 Means
Street NW
Atlanta, GA, 30318
404.688.1970
atlantacontemporary.org
Mrs. Warhol is a Film Love event. The Film Love series provides access to great but rarely
seen films, especially important works unavailable on consumer video. Programs
are curated and introduced by Andy Ditzler, and feature lively discussion.
Through public screenings and events, Film Love preserves the communal viewing
experience, provides space for the discussion of film as art, and explores
alternative forms of moving image projection and viewing.