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Andy
Warhol digital images found on old floppy disks -
26th April 2014
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PHOTO:
Andy2 is among newly-discovered digital works created
by Andy Warhol on an Amiga computer in 1985. (©The
Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visuals Arts, Inc.,
courtesy of The Andy Warhol Museum)
Previously
unknown digital works by pop artist Andy Warhol have
been resurrected from ageing floppy disks by forensic
computer experts in the United States.
A
dozen newly discovered images were unearthed from
the 1985 computer disks by Carnegie Mellon University's
computer club.
The
images depict common Warhol subjects including Campbell's
soup cans, self-portraits, bananas and Marilyn Monroe,
as well as doodles and camera shots of a desktop.
Carnegie
Mellon art professor Golan Levin said the work was
recovered thanks in part to someone posting on YouTube
a 1985 infomercial showing Warhol using an Amiga computer
to create a digital portrait of singer Debbie Harry.
A
Warhol fan, artist Cory Arcangel, saw the YouTube
video and in 2011 began investigating whether there
was more computer art from Warhol to be found.
His
inquiry brought him to The Andy Warhol Museum's archives
in Pittsburgh, where he found a cache of floppy disks
that remained unlabelled because the museum lacked
the outdated technology needed to read them.
Arcangel
helped link the museum with the computer club at Carnegie
Mellon in Pittsburgh, one of the top US technology
schools.
After
some digital sleuthing, the club used a process called
retro-computing to reveal the images in a matter of
hours.
"The
purely digital images, 'trapped' for nearly 30 years
on Amiga floppy disks stored in the archives collection
of The Andy Warhol Museum, were discovered and extracted
by members of the Carnegie Mellon University Computer
Club," the university said in a statement on
its website.
The
newly uncovered art is owned by the Andy Warhol Foundation,
although it was commissioned by Commodore International
to promote its 1985 Amiga 1000 computer.
"What's
amazing is that by looking at these images, we can
see how quickly Warhol seemed to intuit the essence
of what it meant to express oneself, in what then
was a brand new medium: the digital," Arcangel
said in a statement.
The
work adds a new appreciation for Warhol's use of technology,
showing that his interests went far beyond the films
and screen prints for which he is most famous.
Warhol
died in 1987 at age 58.

PHOTO:
The works include Warhol's experiments with classic
images like Campbells soup. ( ©The Andy
Warhol Foundation for the Visuals Arts, Inc., courtesy
of The Andy Warhol Museum)
(ABC
News)
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