Stock photo of Golden Meir 233 (Trial Proof) by Andy Warhol from 1980.
Stock photo of Golden Meir 233 (Trial Proof) by Andy Warhol from 1980.
Size comparison image of Golda Meir 233 (trial proof) on the wall next to silhouettes of Andy Warhol and Edie Sedgewick. Gola Meir is 40 inches by 32 inches.
Andy Warhol standing with screen prints from his Ten Famous Jews of the Twentieth Century series.

Golda Meir 233 (Trial Proof)

Catalog Title: Golda Meir (FS II.233) (Trial Proof)
Year: 1980
Size: 40" x 32"
Medium: Screenprint on Lenox Museum Board
Edition: Edition of 25 TP, signed and numbered in pencil.
Hidden

Represented in Golda Meir 233, Golda Meir was an Israeli politician who became the fourth prime minister of Israel. She was Israel’s first and the world’s third woman to hold such an office. Meir was born in present day Ukraine. Her father moved to the United States in search of a job and found one in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In 1906, Meir and the rest of her family joined her father in the United States. Meir became dedicated to the Labor Zionist movement and in 1921, Meir along with her husband and sister made aliyah and moved to Palestine to join a kibbutz. In 1948, Meir managed to raise millions of dollars in support of the new state of Israel. Meir served as Minister Plenipotentiary to Moscow, Labor Minister, and Foreign Minister before becoming elected as Prime Minister of Israel. Following the Yom Kippur War, Golda Meir resigned from premiership.

Golda Meir 233 as Part of Andy Warhol’s Larger Body of Work

Golda is a part of Andy Warhol’s Ten Portraits of Jews of the 20th Century. Warhol was prolific in creating portraits of celebrities and was well known for his fascination with fame. It is noted that Warhol’s portraiture tends to reveal only the surface of a subject. In this series of portraits, the type of celebrity Warhol deals with is not so glamorous or typical of his usual pick of movie or rock stars.

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