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![]() Image Gallery Links PA State Standards: 9.4.12A. Evaluate an individual’s philosophical statement on a work in the arts and its relationship to one’s own life based on knowledge and experience. 9.4.12D. Analyze and interpret a philosophical position identified in works in the arts and humanities. Learning Objectives and Cognitive Skills: ▪ Students will wrap an object with a unique covering in such a way that the original object’s form is still obvious. ▪ Students will develop an art object, from a readymade object, through its relationship or dialogue with a particular wrapping/covering. ▪ Students will evaluate wrapped art objects based on their context, concept, creativity, and craftsmanship. ▪ Students will be able to critique an artwork by investigating and questioning its 4Cs. |
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Andy Warhol, You’re In, 1967 |
For Warhol, popular mass-produced food items represented the best and brightest of American consumerist society. What could be better than a product, be it Campbell's Soup or Coca-Cola, which was distributed in vast quantities worldwide, the quality of which was consistently excellent and the price eminently affordable? Although he had made paintings of Coke bottles two years before, the artist now turned to a sculptural intervention using actual soda pop bottles (originally conceived by the renowned designer Raymond Loewy), which he coated with silver paint. Three years later, Warhol went a step further by capping 100 silver bottles and filling them with a perfume which he rakishly labeled "You're In"/"Eau d'Andy." Not surprisingly, the Coca-Cola Company responded with a cease and desist letter.
“What’s great about this country is that America started the tradition where the richest consumers buy essentially the same things as the poorest. You can be watching TV and see Coca-Cola, and you can know that the President drinks Cokes, Liz Taylor drinks Cokes, and just think, you can drink Coke, too. A Coke is a Coke and no amount of money can get you a better Coke than the one the bum on the corner is drinking. All the Cokes are the same and all the Cokes are good. Liz Taylor knows it, the President knows it, the bum knows it, and you know it.”
Andy Warhol, The Philosophy of Andy Warhol from A to B and Back Again
This lesson was created in collaboration with Megan Bonistalli, Visual Art Teacher at Seneca Valley High School.
Materials:
This project works best as an overnight assignment so that students can be responsible for finding materials to match their ideas. If you were to conduct it in a studio, you may need:
Found objects (bottles, toys, books, stuffed animals, shoes, silverware)
Various materials (magazines, newspapers, wire, plastic, bandages, hardware, candy, fabric)
Adhesives (glue, hot glue, clear tape, duct tape, paper maché)
Tools (pliers, wire snips)
Procedure:
Aesthetics questions for discussion:
Optional:
Critically respond to Andy Warhol Your In and Glenn Kaino’s Graft (Ostrich) using the 4Cs evaluation system.
Teacher Comments:
“When we come to an art object that we instinctively like or dislike, our personal aesthetic (what we find visually/artistically appealing) is speaking to us. That voice is important to listen to but is not the only authority to consider when viewing an art object. By weighing an artwork's context, concept, creativity, and craftsmanship, we can discover aspects beyond first instinct that make it become more or less appealing, allowing us to have an informed aesthetic response. Trust your instincts, but distrust them too! Always look beyond your first inclination by following the 4Cs before you make a final judgment.”
Megan Bonistalli, Visual Art Teacher Seneca Valley HS
* This lesson was a joint project between The Andy Warhol Museum and Megan Bonistalli: who created the 4C's for Evaluating Art and the student work in the image gallery.