Advertisement

America’s greatest modern political poster

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

Happy election day.

Andy Warhol’s ‘Vote McGovern’ ranks as America’s greatest modern political poster. Made for a 1972 benefit auction, it epitomizes the artist’s gift for fusing artistic traditions both high and low. (The poster’s mock-up is shown here in the 2002 Warhol retropsective at L.A.’s Museum of Contemporary Art, when the former South Dakota senator happened to stop by to see the show.) With the title scrawled like graffiti beneath an official campaign photograph not of McGovern but of his opponent, Richard M. Nixon, Warhol incisively pictured a cliché: Consider the alternative.

That camp dexterity with clichés is what made Warhol a big success in the 1950s advertising industry, and it’s also the key to understanding Pop Art. But there’s more. Color is wickedly deployed.

Advertisement

Against a flaming orange background and above a hot pink suit, Nixon’s face shades from sickly green into bilious blue. The hot and cold complementary colors vivify the image, which accomplishes the reverse of what Warhol had done to Marilyn Monroe. Intimately familiar with Catholic icons since childhood, he had made Marilyn’s publicity photograph into an idealized depiction of the queen of heaven, just days after her tragic death. Nixon, on the other hand, got the Satan treatment, like something from the hellish underworld of Hieronymus Bosch.

Of course, political posters can only do so much. McGovern lost the 1972 election in the second largest landslide in American history. At that point, the previous June’s Watergate burglary was just a brief newspaper item. Two years later Satan--er, I mean, Nixon resigned the presidency in disgrace.

Don’t forget to vote today. If you’re not sure where your Los Angeles polling place is, you can find out here.

--Christopher Knight

Advertisement