Andy Warhol Made Some Very Unusual Paintings When He Was in Art School. Now His Family May Be Trying to Bring Them to Auction

Warhol made the works while studying at the Carnegie Institute in the 1940s.

Andy Warhol, April 1986. Photo by Francois LOCHON/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images. Courtesy of Getty Images.

Relatives of Andy Warhol are reportedly vetting auction houses to sell a group of 10 works the Pop artist created during his art school years, in the mid-1940s.

The paintings include whimsical portraiture of children as well as more abstract, distorted imagery that bear no stylistic resemblance to the later silkscreen portraits that catapulted Warhol to fame in the 1960s.

The artist’s nephew James Warhola is spearheading the effort to sell the works along with his six siblings, according to Artnews. The family did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Image via Warhola.com

Image via Warhola.com

Warhola works as an illustrator and divides his time between upstate New York and Pittsburgh. He and his siblings inherited the works from from their late parents, Anne Warhola and Paul Warhola, who was Andy’s brother. (The artist dropped the last “a” in his Carpatho-Rusyn surname early in his career.)

The 10 works were all produced while Warhol was a student at the Carnegie Institute of Technology (now known as Carnegie-Mellon University) in Pittsburgh from 1945 to 1949.

Some of the works have been displayed at the Andy Warhol Museum, and in a recent traveling exhibition, “Andy Warhol: Lifetimes,” according to Tribune-Review, which first reported the news.

Image via Warhola.com

Image via Warhola.com

A website called the Andy Warhol Family Album shows images of all of the works, which include titles such as Nosepicker #2, I Like Dance, Two Dogs Kissing, and Blue Face, along with an image of the paintings resting on the ground and porch of the “Paul Warhola Family Residence near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.”

“I believe these paintings will do well, but the painting Nosepicker 1 is the real prize,” Warhol expert Richard Polsky told Artnet News. “That’s because it’s probably Andy Warhol’s first self-portrait. Even though it’s not considered part of his mature work, it’s a historically significant indicator of his future fascination with painting his own likeness.”

No prices have yet been set, but, according to Polsky: “One thing is for sure, the works will be modestly estimated to encourage bidding.”


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