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The death of the star: celebrity decay and the Gothic portrait in Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Diptych

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posted on 2023-09-01, 15:09 authored by Harriet Fletcher
This article uses Gothic studies to examine the preoccupation with death in Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Diptych. Drawing on the Gothic convention of the decaying portrait, I argue that Marilyn Diptych communicates a wider tension between immortality and death at the heart of American celebrity culture in the 1960s. The decaying portrait is a traditional motif within the Gothic novel, but this article explores how the portrait itself embodies Gothic qualities of decay. While Warhol’s Electric Chair has been previously analysed within a Gothic framework, I uncover the Gothicness of the celebrity portrait and situate Marilyn Diptych in the context of Marilyn Monroe’s death and the wider culture of mediatised disaster in the 1960s. Ultimately, this article demonstrates how Marilyn Diptych epitomises the landscape of celebrity in the 1960s. As a period of technological modernity dominated by television, the 1960s is a media-saturated image culture that enables the creation and preservation of new kinds of celebrities. However, the period is also tainted by relentless global and domestic crises, within which high-profile celebrity deaths feature strongly. This overwhelming culture of death problematises media immortality by exposing celebrities as fragile Gothic bodies prone to decay.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

13

Issue number

4

Page range

524-537

Publication title

Celebrity Studies

ISSN

1939-2400

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

File version

  • Accepted version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2022-12-19

Legacy creation date

2022-12-16

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

Faculty of Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences

Note

This is an original manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Celebrity Studies on 17th October 2022 available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/19392397.2022.2135083

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