Art is everywhere A book about Andy Warhol

Jeff Mack

Book - 2021

This is the story of Andy Warhol--and how his pop art took the world by storm. From drawing shoes for a shoe company to his Campbell's Soup cans and Marilyn Monroe prints, Andy made art out of the everyday. People claimed Andy's art wasn't real art, but that didn't stop him from making it, plus movies, a magazine, a TV show, and more!

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Picture books
Published
New York : Henry Holt and Co 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Jeff Mack (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9781250777157
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This profile of pop artist Andy Warhol uses a first-person interview format that spotlights selected significant works as well as Warhol's views on life and art. Mack notes Warhol's artistic beginnings drawing shoes; his close relationship with his mother; his penchant for wigs; his prints highlighting Campbell soups, Marilyn Monroe, and Brillo pad boxes; and his fascination with the media of his time--films, television, magazines, and rock records. The text remains conversational throughout, allowing Warhol's personality to emerge: "I think art is about liking things. It's about seeing the things around us in a new way. Seeing them as pretty. Everything is pretty. Don't you think?" Mack's mixed-media and digital artwork employs a variety of techniques (cartoon drawings, textured objects, bright colors, collaged figures, text balloons, and repeated images) and recalls Warhol's style while allowing his own craft to shine. Sometimes text is incorporated into the art, as when multiple television screens display one word or image each, or when text appears on Times Square marquees. An informative introduction, sure to please aspiring artists.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this archly appreciative picture book biography, Mack channels Andy Warhol's (1928--1987) aggressively vapid, relentlessly enthusiastic voice: "Oh, hello. I'm Andy. This is the story of my art. I hope you like it." The subject narrates his career from his beginnings in commercial art, drawing so many shoes that "I felt like a robot in a factory. It was SO cool," to his pop art breakthrough: "I drew this. Isn't it pretty? It's soup. Do you like soup? We all like soup." As Warhol's practice expands into silk screens, film, music, magazines, and television, Mack weaves in iconic details--Warhol's penchant for wigs, collaboration, and mother--and sums up his worldview: "I think art is about liking things. It's about seeing the things around us in a new way. Seeing them as pretty. EVERYTHING is pretty. Don't you think?" Brushy artwork, benday-dot texture, and bright blotched color offer an age-appropriate taste of the Factory. Ages 4--8. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

Part biography, part cheeky course in art appreciation, part conversation starter, this playful picture book looks at the nature of art through the lens of Andy Warhol's work. The first-person text adopts a slightly childlike version of Warhol's voice, addressing the reader directly: "Oh, hello. I'm Andy." Then it launches into the story of Warhol's career, starting with his commercial illustration ("Once upon a time I drew shoes") and progressing through his well-known artworks (think soup cans and Brillo boxes) and forays into other media (film, magazines, rock music). At several points, the narrative pauses to pose rhetorical questions ("What does a real artist look like anyway?") and provide wry asides ("I guess I just wanted to be different"), which lends the tale an offbeat and conversational tone. The text also takes note of the bafflement and critical censure that was sometimes engendered by Warhol's art; and it concludes by slyly imagining his reaction to social media ("We will all like each other over and over again"). Mack's (Moose, Goose, and Mouse, rev. 1/21) digital and mixed-media illustrations recall the vibrant colors of his subject's art, with blurred edges and smudges bringing to mind traditional printmaking techniques. The rhythm of the text also echoes Warhol's enthusiasm for mass production, with repeated words ("shoe shoe shoe shoe shoe") interspersed with matching repeated images. An author's note is appended. Pair with James Warhola's Uncle Andy's (rev. 3/03). K Rachael Stein November/December 2021 p.32(c) Copyright 2021. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Readers can explore just what makes art art with Andy Warhol. A fictional Andy Warhol discusses career highlights as he introduces readers to the existential question "What is art?" The story unfolds in a nonlinear fashion with loose-lined illustrations of Warhol's life. Early on the artist asks readers: "What does a real artist look like anyway?" From there, the story veers from career highlight to career highlight, hitting the Campbell's Soup series, the Marilyn Monroe silkscreens, the Velvet Underground (not mentioned by name), and Interview magazine. Along the way, the fictional Andy challenges readers to consider the paradigms of fame, art, and celebrity. It's a cool challenge, but it's also one that may be a little too hip and a little too glib for readers. Like the real Warhol, the book drops names without explanation and then flits on to a different topic as if it's a little bored with the old one. The short, blasé sentences and questions to readers that assume answers combine into a slightly condescending tone that might be very Warhol but isn't very engaging in a biography section. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Andy Warhol once said, "I am a deeply superficial person," and he sure comes across that way. (author's note) (Picture book/biography. 8-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.