About This Artwork
Vik Muniz
Brazilian, born 1961
Double Elvis1999
Silver dye-bleach prints
97.8 x 78.2 cm (each)
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Fund, 2000.30.1-2
Vik Muniz has become known for employing unusual materials to create what he calls "the worst possible illusion that will still fool the eye." In his series Pictures of Chocolate, Muniz used Bosco syrup to re-create iconic images from fine art. Muniz had to work quickly to finish and photograph his drawings before the syrup dried and lost its glossy look. In fact, Muniz turned to color photography for the first time in this project because of Bosco's resemblance in black and white to blood (for which it was used in early horror films, including Psycho). This image of Andy Warhol's 1963 Double Elvis–itself already an appropriation of a famous Hollywood photograph–thus takes on another layer of representation in its turn from portrait to memento mori.
Exhibition, Publication and Ownership Histories
Exhibition History
AIC, "Optical Delusions: Jokes, Puns and Sleights of Hand in Photography," June 17–October 15, 2000. (Colin Westerbeck)
AIC, "A Mind at Play," June 14–September 7, 2008. (David Travis)
Publication History
Lago, Pedro Corrêa do. 2009. "Vik Muniz: Obra Completa 1987–2009." Capivara Editora Ltda. pp. 316–17. (Catalogue Raisonne).
