1965 marked a surge in Andy Warhol’s filmic output. Shot and shown in that weighty year of Vietnam escalation, space walks, and civil riots, HORSE was just one of over 25 films that Warhol’s film factory churned out. The film, a mischievously queer and cruel “Western,” consists of three long takes that capture four young men dressed in cowboy outfits acting out vaguely Western scenarios. With its static framing and rudimentary narrative, the film falls somewhere between Warhol’s early period of silent, fixed-frame Minimalist expressions (EAT, SLEEP, and EMPIRE) and his later period of more discernible narrative forms (BIKE BOY, NUDE RESTAURANT, and Warhol’s other Western LONESOME COWBOYS). .—studentgroups.ucla.edu
American pop artist Andy Warhol became a pop icon himself, symbolizing the wild decadence of the “beautiful people” of the 1970s. Born Andrew Warhola in Pennsylvania, he studied at the Carnegie Institute of Technology before designing advertisements for women’s shoes. After gaining notoriety for his pop-art renditions of things such as Campbell’s Soup cans and silk screens of Marilyn Monroe, Warhol began making experimental films during the early ‘60s. Most of his early works were little more than passive chronicles of the ordinary. For example, in the film Sleep, he simple recorded a man sleeping for several hours. Such endeavors were heralded as groundbreaking by other experimental filmmakers, but the public and most critics generally regarded them as wastes of film, and their time. Still, Warhol continued making these plotless films until he eventually began adding crude soundtracks and sketchy scripts. Many of these films are filled with his “players”: the beautiful people, “freaks… read more