Andy Warhol's Mother
The Woman Behind the Artist
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
While biographers of Andy Warhol have long recognized his mother as a significant influence on his life and art, Julia Warhola’s story has not yet been told. As an American immigrant who was born in a small Carpatho-Rusyn village in Austria-Hungary in 1891, Julia never had the opportunity to develop her own considerable artistic talents. Instead, she worked and sacrificed so her son could follow his dreams, helping to shape Andy’s art and persona. Julia famously followed him to New York City and lived with him there for almost twenty years, where she remained engaged in his personal and artistic life. She was well known as “Andy Warhol’s mother,” even developing a distinctive signature with the title that she used on her own drawings.
Exploring previously unpublished material, including Rusyn-language correspondence and videos, Andy Warhol’s Mother provides the first in-depth look at Julia’s hardscrabble life, her creative imagination, and her spirited personality. Elaine Rusinko follows Julia’s life from the folkways of the Old Country to the smog of industrial Pittsburgh and the tumult of avant-garde New York. Rusinko explores the impact of Julia’s Carpatho-Rusyn culture, Byzantine Catholic faith, and traditional worldview on her ultra-modern son, the quintessential American artist. This close examination of the Warhola family’s lifeworld allows a more acute perception of both Andy and Julia while also illuminating the broader social and cultural issues that confronted and conditioned them.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Rusinko (editor of God Is a Rusyn), a professor emerita of Russian at the University of Maryland, blends ethnography and biography for this eccentric portrait of Julia Warhola (1892–1972), the mother of Andy Warhol (1928–1987). Drawing from interviews as well as research on Slavic immigrant groups, Rusinko reconstructs the peasant community in Czecheslovakia where Warhola (then Zavacky) was born, raised, and at 17 married off to 20-year-old Andrii Varchola. After the couple moved to America in the early 20th century and changed their name to Warhola, Julia gave birth to three sons and endured poverty in the slums of Depression-era Pittsburgh. Rusinko overlays the story with detailed background on the family's Carpatho-Rusyn heritage, contending that its "theatrical" folk culture shaped Julia's innate "artistic sense" as well as her son's campy aesthetic, and drawing a direct link to Andy's artistic practice of lavishing cinematic attention on everyday objects. Unfortunately, those intriguing parallels are weakened by speculation on Carpatho-Rusyn influences on Julia's mothering style and even Andy's distaste for doing laundry ("Like so many Carpatho-Rusyn men of his generation, Warhol had not learned basic housekeeping skills"). Despite some enlightening moments, this doesn't quite come together. Photos.