Christmas Tree

Andy Warhol’s work as a commercial illustrator ran the gamut – from illustrations of shoes for Glamour magazine to Christmas cards for Tiffany & Co. The latter was perfectly suited for Warhol, whose love for Christmas has become more and more understood in the last several years. Tiffany’s published Warhol’s Christmas cards from 1956 to 1962.

In 1957, Warhol created an illustration of an ornate gold Christmas tree to be featured in the December issue of Harper’s Bazaar. That Christmas tree also served as an announcement of Warhol’s exhibit at the Bodley Gallery in New York City, “A Show of Golden Pictures,” which took place from December 2-24, 1957.

Warhol introduced gold “leaf” into his works after his first trip abroad in 1956. According to Charles Lisanby, who went with Warhol on this trip, “the working of gold lacquer surfaces with black ornaments in Thailand inspired Warhol to choose this color combination for [gold works],” including A Gold Book, which Warhol published in 1957.[1]

Year: Circa 1957
Medium: Offset lithograph printed in gold
Size: 12.75 x 19.5 in (32.4 x 49.5 cm)

Provenance: 
Estate of Andy Warhol (stamped)
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts (stamped)
Long-Sharp Gallery

Authenticated by the Authentication Board of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts (stamp on verso), Foundation archive number on verso in pencil, initialed by the person who entered the works into The Foundation archive.


 

[1] Nina Schleif, "Clever Frivolity in Excelsis: Warhol's Promotional Books," in Reading Andy Warhol (Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2013), 112.