The Kiss (Bela Lugosi)

Description

The Kiss (Bela Lugosi) was an early experiment with the silkscreen process that would transform Andy Warhol’s art; it was also one of only three prints the artist silk-screened onto paper rather than linen. Although the mechanized process lent itself to the quick and easy reproduction of a single image, each version is slightly different because the artist hand-rolled ink across the screen. This work reproduces a still from the 1931 Dracula movie in which Bela Lugosi, as Count Dracula, is about to bite the neck of Mina (played by Helen Chandler). Warhol continued exploring this subject matter later in 1963 with the film Kiss, which consists of various couples acting out the titular embrace.

More works by the artist are on view in Gallery 296C.

The Kiss (Bela Lugosi)

Andy Warhol

1963

Accession Number

69013

Medium

Silkscreen on cream wove paper

Dimensions

74.5 × 100 cm (29 3/8 × 39 3/8 in.)

Classification

screenprint

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Purchased with funds provided by Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Delaney and the Prints and Drawings Fund