Vincent Fremont, one of Warhol’s associates, commented that the artist’s mission was to “document everything he came into contact with.” This included preserving a vast amount of his correspondence. The Time Capsules are full of telephone messages, business contracts, personal letters and postcards, exhibition invitations, and fan mail. Despite his busy schedule, Warhol opened all of his own mail, “although there were several assistants standing around doing nothing,” according to Bob Colacello, editor of Warhol’s Interview Magazine in the 1970s. “[Warhol] did it systematically; first he brought each piece of mail extremely close to his eyes and examined it intently, as if he were trying to see through the envelope or analyze the handwriting in the address. Then he tore the canceled stamps off each and every piece, domestic and foreign, and stuffed them into a large manila envelope. This was his “stamp collection”. Colacello noted that as he did this, Warhol sorted the mail into separate piles for invitations, bills, checks, and fan letters. After opening the mail, Warhol and his assistants would drop it into a new Time Capsule on the floor beside the desk.
This postcard bears the image of the painting Harlequin on Horseback by Pablo Picasso.
This postcard is from “Bill” (no last name mentioned) to Andy Warhol. It concerns their friendship and his ballet company.
A greeting card in the shape of a black kitten, with a fuzzy black flocked surface. There is no correspondent or recipient name. The greeting inside reads, “Inky brings a warm ‘hello’ to someone very nice to know.”
TC21 Object: Greeting card (back)
This envelope was from Lance Loud to Andy Warhol. It contained an invitation and is postmarked from Santa Barbara, California, 1968. A handwritten address with stars across Andy Warhol’s name and an “air mail” stamp in red ink with “Merry Christmas Andy” is handwritten on the sealing flap. At thirteen, Lance Loud wrote his first letter to Warhol and was astonished when Warhol wrote back. They continued their correspondence until 1968, when Warhol was shot. The card shown here was written about 6 months after the shooting.
Inside the envelope, an invitation reads “You are invited to a party at the Louds Party, December 29, 1968…This is a happy peoples party, for people happy or not…” handwritten in black ink and illustrations of the sun, flowers, and a woman’s head. Lance Loud rose to fame when the PBS documentary series An American Family aired in 1973. The twelve-part series followed the lives of Lance, his parents, and his four siblings over the course of seven months. The series has become known as the first reality television show; Lance Loud was one of the first openly gay person to be depicted in a family setting on television. Loud finally met Warhol after moving to New York in 1973. Warhol had seen An American Family and remembered their letters. They became friends and colleagues: Loud wrote for Interview magazine from 1975-1990.
Loud’s note to Warhol was written about 6 months after Warhol was shot. Loud plaintively asks to be acknowledged by his hero and states, “You, to me, are everything I ever want to be.” Loud later cited Warhol as a major influence for his self-described “outrageous” television personality in <em>An American Family</em>. For more on their relationship, visit Lance Loud on PBS.
This envelope contains five telephone messages, posted November 26, 1972, New York. Four of five messages are for Andy Warhol, including collect calls. Warhol loved talking on the telephone, and reportedly could talk for hours.
This message addressed to Andy Warhol reads “station to station, collect call” with the note “serv. refused.”
This message was for Andy Warhol with the message “asked for John”.
This message was for Andy Warhol with the message “L.D. collect call, when serv. refused, party hung up.”