Verso: An Art History Podcast

When Bob Dylan Traded an Andy Warhol Painting for a Couch

19 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio When Bob Dylan Traded an Andy Warhol Painting for a Couch

Descripción

In 1966, Bob Dylan left Andy Warhol's Factory with a silver Elvis painting tied to the roof of his car, then traded it for a couch. This episode follows that Double Elvis through the Factory, the supposed Dylan–Warhol rivalry, Edie Sedgwick, and a much stranger truth, all the way to its home at MoMA and a $27 million auction that proves Dylan should've kept it. A story about myth, fame, and what we decide is worth keeping. Buy Me a Coffee: ⁠⁠https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod⁠⁠ [https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod] Follow Me on TikTok: ⁠⁠https://tiktok.com/@versopod⁠⁠ [https://www.tiktok.com/@versopod] Email me: hello@versopod.com Suggested Further Reading * Blake Gopnik, Warhol: A Life as Art (Ecco/HarperCollins, 2020) * Jean Stein and George Plimpton, Edie: An American Biography (Knopf, 1982) * Howard Sounes, Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan (Grove Press, 2001)

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18 episodios

Portada del episodio When Bob Dylan Traded an Andy Warhol Painting for a Couch

When Bob Dylan Traded an Andy Warhol Painting for a Couch

In 1966, Bob Dylan left Andy Warhol's Factory with a silver Elvis painting tied to the roof of his car, then traded it for a couch. This episode follows that Double Elvis through the Factory, the supposed Dylan–Warhol rivalry, Edie Sedgwick, and a much stranger truth, all the way to its home at MoMA and a $27 million auction that proves Dylan should've kept it. A story about myth, fame, and what we decide is worth keeping. Buy Me a Coffee: ⁠⁠https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod⁠⁠ [https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod] Follow Me on TikTok: ⁠⁠https://tiktok.com/@versopod⁠⁠ [https://www.tiktok.com/@versopod] Email me: hello@versopod.com Suggested Further Reading * Blake Gopnik, Warhol: A Life as Art (Ecco/HarperCollins, 2020) * Jean Stein and George Plimpton, Edie: An American Biography (Knopf, 1982) * Howard Sounes, Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan (Grove Press, 2001)

Ayer19 min
Portada del episodio Whistler v. Ruskin: The Trial Over a Pot of Paint

Whistler v. Ruskin: The Trial Over a Pot of Paint

In 1877, the most powerful art critic in Britain published a review calling the painter James McNeill Whistler a fraud. Whistler sued him for libel. What followed was a two-day trial in which paintings were held upside down, a jury of twelve people was asked to determine the future of art criticism, and the whole thing ended with a verdict of one farthing in damages. Ruskin and Whistler never met. Not before the trial, not during it, and not after. Two men who had never been in the same room managed to derail each other's careers entirely from a distance, over a painting of fireworks in the dark. This episode is about what the farthing actually cost both of them, and why the thing that ruined Whistler financially turned out to be the best thing that ever happened to his art. Suggested Further Reading * Linda Merrill, A Pot of Paint: Aesthetics on Trial in Whistler v. Ruskin (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1992) * James McNeill Whistler, The Gentle Art of Making Enemies (1890, repr. Dover Publications, 1967) * Daniel E. Sutherland, Whistler: A Life for Art's Sake (Yale University Press, 2014) Buy Me a Coffee: ⁠https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod⁠ [https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod] Follow Me on TikTok: ⁠https://tiktok.com/@versopod⁠ [https://www.tiktok.com/@versopod] Email me: hello@versopod.com

1 de jun de 202626 min
Portada del episodio Robert Mapplethorpe and the Corcoran: The Imperfect Moment

Robert Mapplethorpe and the Corcoran: The Imperfect Moment

In 1989, the Corcoran Gallery of Art canceled a Robert Mapplethorpe photography exhibition to protect the NEA from a congressional culture war. The decision backfired spectacularly, triggering mass resignations, donor defections, and a chilling effect on American arts institutions that lasted decades. The Corcoran never fully recovered. It closed in 2014, its $2 billion collection given away for free. This episode traces the full arc: Mapplethorpe's life and work, the NEA funding wars of the late 1980s, the board meeting that changed everything, and the slow institutional decline that followed. It's a story about censorship, cowardice, good intentions, and the long consequences of a single wrong decision — and about what American cultural life lost when one museum flinched. Buy Me a Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod [https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod] Follow Me on TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@versopod [https://www.tiktok.com/@versopod] Email me: hello@versopod.com

18 de may de 202631 min
Portada del episodio The Disappearance of Agnes Martin

The Disappearance of Agnes Martin

In the summer of 1967, Agnes Martin walked into a New York gallery, handed over her brushes, her canvases, and her stretchers, and asked the dealer to give them away to young artists. Then she got in a truck and left. She would not make another painting for four and a half years. The art world didn't know what to make of it. But then, the art world had never quite known what to make of Agnes Martin. This episode is the story of one of the most critically acclaimed painters in New York at the height of her career, and what happened when she walked away from all of it. It's about the mythology that built up around her so-called disappearance, the more complicated reality underneath it, and the work she made in the New Mexican desert that many consider the most significant painting of her life. It's also about what her story reveals about the art world's geography of legitimacy: the idea that you must be in the right city, the right room, the right scene to matter, and what it costs to believe that. Agnes Martin's story touches on abstract art and minimalism, the New York art scene of the 1950s and 60s, women in art history, mental health and creativity, and the mechanics of the art market. It moves from Coenties Slip to the Betty Parsons Gallery to a fifty-acre mesa in New Mexico, and ends, decades later, with a joint retrospective at the Tate, LACMA, and the Guggenheim. It is, at its core, a story about what it means to trust your own instincts over the art world's idea of where you're supposed to be. Buy Me a Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod Follow Me on TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@versopod Email me: hello@versopod.com

4 de may de 202626 min
Portada del episodio Han van Meegeren: The Last Vermeer

Han van Meegeren: The Last Vermeer

In 1945, Dutch painter Han van Meegeren was arrested for selling a stolen Vermeer to Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering. His defense: he hadn't sold a Vermeer at all. He'd painted it himself. This episode tells the full story of the twentieth century's most audacious art forger — and the story most people don't know. Van Meegeren didn't just fool the art world's greatest experts with his fake Vermeers. He fooled them because he understood something about desire that they didn't: people don't see what's in front of them. They see what they've already decided is there. What emerges is a story about Nazi ideology embedded in Old Master brushwork, a postwar nation desperate for a hero it could believe in, and a man who spent his entire life performing one role or another — right up until the moment he performed his way out of a death sentence. Buy Me a Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/versopod Follow Me on TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@versopod

20 de abr de 20261 h 2 min