

Galerie Daniel Templon, Paris
Private Collection, New York
Private Collection, London
Private Collection, Europe
Phillips, London, June 27, 2013, lot 13
Private Collection
Acquired from the above by the present owner
1996; Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Wilhelm-Hack Museum, September 1996 - January 1997;
Kunsthalle Helsinki, August - November 1997; Warsaw, The National Museum, March
May 1998; Krakow, The National Museum, May - July 1998; Rio de Janeiro, Centro
Cultural Banco do Brasil, October – December 1999; Kochi, The Museum of Art, February
March 2000, Umeda, Daimaru Museum, May -June 2000; Hiroshima, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, June - July 2000; Sakura, Kawamura Memorial Museum of Art, August - October 2000; Nagoya, Nagoya City Art Museum, October - December 2000; Niigata, Niigata City Art Museum, January - February 2001.
V. Fremont, Cast a Cold Eye: The Late Work of Andy Warhol, New York: Gagosian Gallery, 2006,
p. 86 (illustrated in color).
N. Printz and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, The Andy Warhol catalogue
raisonné 5A, Painting 1976-1978, London: Phaidon, 2018, no. 3491, pp. 88, 100 (illustrated in
color).
Andy Warhol’s Skull belongs to a body of work that appears, at first glance, almost disarmingly direct. A skull, isolated against a bare ground, is among the oldest and most legible motifs in Western art: the quintessential memento mori, the emblem through which vanitas painting collapses worldly splendor into dust. Yet in Warhol’s hands, the image becomes stranger and more exacting. Begun in 1976, the Skull paintings do not simply reprise that tradition; they subject it to the visual logic of Pop, recasting an ancient symbol of death as an image that is staged, serialized, theatrical, and unmistakably modern.
The source, characteristically, was matter-of-fact. Warhol’s studio assistant Ronnie Cutrone photographed a human skull that the artist had reportedly purchased in Paris, placing it on a paper-covered surface before a blank wall and lighting it so that its shadow shifted dramatically across the composition. That shadow became central. In these works, the skull is never merely presented; it is doubled by its own projection, shadowed by a dark echo that magnifies its presence even as it destabilizes it. Warhol was drawn not only to the object itself, but to the formal drama produced by light falling across bone: the cavernous sockets, the toothy smile, the abrupt collision of illuminated surface and engulfing blackness. The result is an image that feels at once starkly physical and peculiarly spectral.
That tension is crucial to the series. Warhol’s skull is not rendered in the richly descriptive manner of 17th-century still life, where the motif appears amid flowers, fruit, and other emblems of worldly pleasure destined to decay. Warhol strips away that symbolic apparatus entirely. There is no sumptuous setting, no inventory of luxuries, no moralizing abundance against which death can announce itself. There is only the skull, enlarged and isolated, set against fields of synthetic color. In that act of reduction, mortality becomes the sole and inescapable subject.
And yet Skull is never merely austere. One of the series’ deepest tensions lies in its fusion of morbidity and seduction. Warhol renders death in vivid colors that can feel acidic, seductive, even perversely glamorous. Skull appears in jolts of turquoise, magenta, orange, and yellow, haloed by atmospheric passages and offset by shadows that verge on abstraction. As so often in Warhol’s work, color complicates rather than stabilizes meaning. This was already true of the artist’s early engagement with death, from the elegiac afterlife of Marilyn Monroe in the 1960s to the blunt spectacle of the Death and Disaster paintings. In each case, Warhol understood that modern image culture does not separate attraction from catastrophe, but binds them together. Skull extends that insight in distilled form: death is made vibrant and visually irresistible, and the ancient memento mori is recast as one of Warhol’s most exacting meditations on the entanglement of allure and destruction.
By 1976, however, that theme had acquired a more personal charge. Warhol’s engagement with death had shaped some of his most important work of the early 1960s, but the subject became newly intimate after he was shot by Valerie Solanas in 1968, leaving him permanently scarred, physically and psychologically. He later recalled: “Before I was shot, I always thought that I was more half-there than all-there—I always suspected that I was watching TV instead of living life. People sometimes say that the way things happen in movies is unreal, but actually it’s the way things happen in life that’s unreal. The movies make emotions look so strong and real, whereas when things really do happen to you, it’s like watching television – you don’t feel anything. Right when I was being shot and ever since, I knew that I was watching television. The channels switch, but it’s all television.” In the years that followed, portrait commissions increasingly defined his public image. The Skull paintings cut sharply against that sheen. For all their chromatic allure, they mark a return to mortality with uncommon bluntness, at a moment when death was no longer an abstract theme in Warhol’s imagination but a lived fact. If the skull operates as a universal image — Cutrone described it as “everybody’s portrait” — it also carries the force of something more intimate: a displaced form of self-recognition.
Skull is not simply a late reprise of Warhol’s longstanding fascination with death. It is one of its clearest and most distilled expressions. Stark, stage-lit, and unnervingly alive, these paintings make mortality feel less like an inherited art-historical theme than a condition of modern image culture itself: flattened into a surface, circulated as spectacle, and yet never fully stripped of dread. Beneath the polish, the wit, and the synthetic brilliance of color, Skull remains what it has always threatened to become in Warhol’s hands: not simply an emblem of death, but a portrait of the body after image, and of the image after life.