You know the Warhol portraits - big, colorful, star-struck paintings. But what you haven't seen are the photographs the artist took of his subjects in the first place. A new exhibit opening at the Nasher Museum at Duke University includes about 250 Polaroids and 75 black-and-white prints he took between 1970 and 1987.
Using a Polaroid Big Shot camera, Warhol captured the poses of such celebrities as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Truman Capote, Dorothy Hamill, Bianca Jagger, Grace Jones and Jack Nicklaus. Many will be displayed for the first time.
The origin of the exhibition was the donation of hundreds of Warhol photographs to the Nasher, the Ackland Art Museum in Chapel Hill and the Weatherspoon Art Museum in Greensboro by the Andy Warhol Foundation in New York. The show travels to the Weatherspoon next summer and comes to Chapel Hill about a year from now.




