Arthur and Andy

In Lydia Goehr & Jonathan Gilmore (eds.), A Companion to Arthur C. Danto. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 389–396 (2021)
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Abstract

Arthur Danto once stood next to Andy Warhol at a gallery opening while Warhol autographed his wife's brochure. For Danto, Warhol embodied the age and its aspirations: a philosophical artist in gel. Danto was also writing autobiographically in describing Warhol's before and after. The before and after made them alike: each became a modernist figure of unparalleled boldness, audacity, and brilliance. A number of critics understood that Warhol was pushing against the limits of art in a way that forced abstract reflection on what art was, is, and could be. Danto reasoned that a cultural background puts in place a set of concepts allowing one thing to be schematized differently from a visually indiscernible counterpart. Warhol's work was to him more like declarative language than anything else: it spoke in virtue of a shared background of concepts, which he called a theory.

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Daniel Herwitz
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

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