Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Warhol art found on Amiga disks

Andy Warhol creating art on an Amiga, with Debbie Harry
Back when we were talking about hardware, I mentioned that I had gone to buy a PC and the salesperson asked if I wanted to purchase an additional 25MB (that's megabyte, mind you) hard drive for $500. I said in response that I had no use for something like that because I would never be able to fill up a 25MB hard drive in my lifetime. The 3 1/2" floppies were enough for me.

That was around 1988 and the PC I was buying was a Commodore Amiga 500. Developed by the same company that had created the Commodore 64 - the best selling PC of all time - the Amiga was well-regarded as the machine to beat. It had 512 MB of memory, expandable to 1GB, an unheard of amount at the time. It's graphical user interface (remember that?) was way ahead of its time and its graphics capabilities were so advanced that television networks used it to make the animations for everything from station identification bumps to the animated opening for Monday Night Football. And of course you could just mosey through dungeons if that was your thing.

At the time, these were the most advanced graphics you could get on any PC
Interesting side note: if you ever saw the movie Wayne's World, Dana Carvey's character Garth Algar was actually modeled after his brother, who was one of the developers of the Amiga program Video Toaster, which not only was a video editor used for the kind of animation just mentioned, the software actually won an Emmy!

The reason I bring all of this up is because just recently, art created by well-known pop-culture artist Andy Warhol - on an Amiga computer using the GraphiCraft program - was just discovered on a cache of floppy disks. He made the creations during a collaboration with Amiga, but they weren't discovered until recently.

Andy Warhol art created on the Amiga
This is the first discovery of its kind that I can remember, that being digital art created by a well-known artist on a vintage PC., and I suspect it will be the last. Many people create digital art today, but Andy Warhol was creating it at the forefront of computer graphics capabilities, over twenty years ago.

I just threw this picture in because I like it. That's an Amiga 500.

4 comments:

  1. Even though computer graphics were not the best back then he still managed to create art. Being able to create art at the forefront is amazing and it just shows what an artist Andy Warhol really is. It would be interesting if Andy were alive today and what type of art he would able to create with computer graphics now.

    -Stephanie Theobald

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  2. The first computer I ever worked on was a huge machine with a small green screen. I'm not sure what it was called other than we used it for computer coding assignment at school - high school. The next computer was one we bought from Gateway back in 1993. We had it custom made with dual charges because we were stationed in Germany. One of my cousin, who is an artist who can draw anything, came to stay with us and he made computer animation and cartoon characters on the computer. Andy Warhol reminded me of my cousin. There are some really talented people hidden away from the world that can do some amazing things on computers.

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  3. Andy Warhol was a great artist and it's amazing that his art was found on an old computer considering the capabilities of the old computers. I guess, if a person is talented it doesn't matter the resources, art will be produced.

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  4. Check out Debbie Harry! She was my idol when I was a kid!! I was never a huge fan of Andy Warhol, or pop art for that matter, but I do understand the significance of the movement and I do think what he created was cool. I checked out some of the pictures that were found on the Amiga and they were fun to look at. It makes me wonder what kind of art he would have created and had he been creating his art today.

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