Exhibition

Warhol in London: Behind the Lens of William John Kennedy

25 Nov 2015 – 20 Dec 2015

Regular hours

Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
10:00 – 18:00
Sunday
10:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00

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A&D Gallery

London, United Kingdom

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  • 3 minutes walk from Baker Street Tube
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KIWI Arts Group is pleased to present Warhol in London: Behind the Lens of William John Kennedy, a month long pop-up exhibition on Chiltern Street from the 25th November to the 20th December.

About

KIWI Arts Group is pleased to present Warhol in London: Behind the Lens of William John Kennedy, a month long pop-up exhibition on Chiltern Street from the 25th November to the 20th December. Featuring over 20 black & white and color photographs of Andy Warhol that until recently had laid hidden in a dusty box. It will be the first time the collection has ever been exhibited in the United Kingdom since it’s unveiling in Miami Beach during Art Basel in 2010.

A few short years ago American photographer William John Kennedy brushed off a long forgotten dusty box headed for the rubbish bin after it lay in storage for nearly five decades. That rescued box would later reveal a collection of extraordinary works of art Kennedy created with the help of Andy Warhol in a series of photo sessions on the cusp of his meteoric rise to fame. The recovered archive of Kennedy's negatives has been transformed into a collection of limited edition color prints and gelatin silver photographs capturing the most important images Warhol ever created. The photographs have now become part of several important public and private collections around the world, with one standing 4 meters tall as the focal point of The Andy Warhol Museum.

“Kennedy has given us some of the most joyous and insightful images of Andy Warhol ever created. The photographs are both engaging and rare. Remarkably, Kennedy kept his archive in storage for nearly 50 years. Now the Andy Warhol Museum is delighted to be involved in bringing these images to a wider public.” —Eric C. Shiner, Director of The Andy Warhol Museum

The exhibition was put together by a London collector and KIWI Arts Group—the publisher of the photographs from the Kennedy archive. The show will host several charity receptions and special events to include Make-A-Wish Foundation UK, The Sick Children’s Trust, KidsOut Foundation, Variety - The Children’s Charity, World Jewish Relief, The Independent Film Trust, The Happy Tenant Company, Rowan Dartington and Coutts Bank.

This exhibition provides a rare opportunity to view the photographs and purchase (starting at £2000) the limited edition gelatin silver and color prints from the collection, with a substantial portion of the proceeds going to charity. Also for the first time, several never before published original Kennedy photographs of Warhol will be released at the London show.

You might not know his name because William John Kennedy previously only exhibited a single photograph of Andy Warhol from his archive in 1967 at a New York show titled Homage to Marilyn Monroe. His work appeared alongside Salvador Dali, William deKooning, Richard Avedon, Bert Stern, Cartier-Bresson, Phillip Halsman and 35 other artists that help shape 20th Century art. Then he quietly tucked the negatives in a box and placed them in a closet to collect dust. Kennedy is only now finding his name among the artists of his time, as he reveals this truly historic body of work to the world nearly half a century later.

“It was fate...imagine the New York art scene in the 1960s, historically it was a pivotal period in so many ways and on the eve of Andy’s worldwide fame. From the first moment I stepped into Warhol's Factory, I immediately sensed the enormous importance of what this guy was doing. You could feel the electricity running through his veins, you just knew his vision would shape the future in a major way—I wanted to capture that energy. Maybe I shouldn’t have waited so long to print the photographs!” —William John Kennedy 

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