Find The Warhols!
Project by Greg Allen
Project by Greg Allen
Earlier this month eleven portrait paintings by Andy Warhol were reported stolen from the home of Los Angeles collector Richard Weisman. The paintings, known the Athletes Series, depict some of the greatest athletes in the world in 1977, plus Weisman. There is a $1 million reward for information leading to their return.
When one man's Warhols are stolen, all our Warhols are stolen, because no matter how many Warhols you technically own, Warhol belongs to all of us. It's imperative that we band together to help these Warhols return to their rightful home [so they can be sold]. Which is why greg.org is announcing The Find The Warhols Project.
MISSION
The Find The Warhols Project seeks to facilitate the safe return of the Weisman Warhols by assisting in the dissemination of crucial identifying information where it is needed most: on the front lines of the art world.
FTW will educate and empower an ever-vigilant grass roots army of Warhol Watchers who will be able to quickly spot the stolen Warhols from among the thousands of Warhols streaming through the art world every day.
THE PROJECT
Many, many Warhols look the same, especially the 40x40-in. square silkscreened portraits of seemingly random people who were rich and/or famous in the 70's and 80s. This can make it hard to tell if a Warhol is hot or not.
Fortunately, on September 10th, 2009, The Los Angeles Police Department's Art Theft Detail released a one-page Crime Alert [top] with reproductions of the exact eleven stolen paintings and a critical detail: "NOTE: other Warhol originals exist for each of the images below, but with different colors."
This is an invaluable crimebusting tool that needs to be distributed as widely as possible and studied regularly whenever you buy, sell, see, hang, ship, frame, conserve, appraise, authenticate, license for marketing, or critique a Warhol.
To that end, FTW will take this crucial-but-small Crime Alert and make larger versions which will enable quick and certain detection at a glance. These giant, poster-sized versions will be offset print in full color on 100-lb glossy paper, and will be suitable for hanging by Warhol Watchers at key art world locations with high Warhol traffic, including:
HOW YOU CAN HELP
BUDGET AND OTHER DETAILS
The FTW project only seeks to cover the actual costs of printing and distributing the giant Crime Alert posters. Each poster will be 4x the original size, 17x28 inches, and printed in full-color offset on 100-lb. glossy paper. The cost for set-up and offset printing the smallest batch of custom-sized posters is $883, shipped. 1st class postage for a high quality mailing tube made from 100% recycled paper containing two posters costs $3.62/order. Running the numbers, then, the minimum number of $10 pledges required to make the project happen is 141.
Obviously, with a live crime case such as this, time is of the essence, and the more posters that get out there, the better for finding the Warhols. It should be equally obvious that if the Warhols are found before the goal is met, the Project will be terminated, and we can all breathe a sigh of relief. It should also be obvious, but important to state anyway, that the FTW Project is an entirely grass-roots endeavor by sympathetic Warhol collectors and others committed to preserving, and is in no way affiliated with or sanctioned by the LAPD, the Weisman family, or any other parties with a financial or other interest in the Stolen Warhols.
BACKGROUND
The Warhols, known as the Athlete Series were commissioned by Richard Weisman in 1977 for the purpose of bringing together the world's two greatest leisure pastimes--art and sports. They are all portraits of famous athletes posing with the primary implement of their chosen sport next to their heads. Plus a headshot of Weisman himself, whose mother co-founded the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, and whose uncle Norton Simon founded the Norton Simon Museum.
Warhol produced eight complete sets of the paintings for Weisman, plus an unidentified number of additional individual paintings. Two sets were broken up and given to each athlete and his or her sports governing body. Weisman donated two sets to university collections. Weisman's three kids each got a set. And he kept one for himself. Total price tag for the project: a reported $800,000.
All the works are 40x40 inches, silkscreen and polymer paint on canvas. Warhol also created other, differently sized versions of some images. Except for the Muhammad Ali paintings, all the canvases were signed by the athletes at the time of their completion. For Ali, Weisman had Ali sign five paintings [presumably the non-donated ones: his own, his kids' and one extra, see below] during a visit to Los Angeles in 1991. Each silkscreened canvas was painted in a unique color combination.
Weisman began marketing his set for sale several years ago. He loaned it to the Warhol Museum in 2005. In 2007, it was offered in London by the dealer Martin Summers for $28 million, along with several individual paintings. It was still for sale in 2008, when he showed it in Beijing during the Olympics. The 2007 show also included a loosie Ali portrait with a purple ground. A couple of months later, Ali's own red & green version of the painting, which had been given to his ex-wife, sold at Christie's for $9.2 million.
So you can just imagine how vitally important these Warhols are to Weisman. They're practically his children. Children he can hopefully sell for a nice eight figure sum. And children whose safe return could bring a million dollars to the one who makes it happen. Won't you help?
2 giant FTW Crime Alert posters, shipped within the USA, for owners of between 0 and 10 Warhols.
2 giant FTW Crime Alert posters, shipped worldwide, for owners of between 0 and 10 Warhols.
2 giant FTW Crime Alert posters, shipped worldwide, for owners of 11 or more Warhols.
Washington, DC
A writer, filmmaker and art collector based in Washington DC and New York City.