Speaking in 2002, John Cale said "It wasn't called the Factory for nothing. It was where the assembly line for the silkscreens happened. While one person was making a silkscreen, somebody else would be filming a screen test. Every day something new."
By the time Warhol had become famous, he was working day and night on his paintings. To create his art, Warhol used silkscreens so that he could mass-produce images the way America mass produces consumer goods. In order to continue working the way he did, he assembled a menagerie of porn stars, drag queens, drug addicts, musicians, and free-thinkers that became known as the Warhol superstars, to help him. These "art-workers" helped him create his paintings, starred in his films, and basically developed the atmosphere that the Factory has become legendary for.
Upon visiting Billy Name's apartment, which had been decorated in a similar manner, Warhol fell in love with the idea and asked him to do the same for his recently purchased loft. The silver represented the decadence of the scene, as well as the proto-glam of the early seventies. By combining the industrial structure of the unfurnished studio with the glitter of silver and what it represented, Warhol was commenting on American values, as he did so often in his art. The years spent at the Factory were known as the Silver Era, not solely because of the design, but because of the decadent and carefree lifestyle full of money, parties, drugs and fame.
Aside from his two-dimensional art, Andy also used the Factory as a base to make shoes, films, commissions, sculptures and just about everything else that the Warhol name could be attached to and sold. His first commissions consisted of a single silkscreen of the person for $25,000, with additional canvases in other colors for $5,000 each. He later made that $20,000. Warhol used a large portion of his income to finance the lifestyle of his Factory friends, practically showering them with resources.
Similarly for Jagger, Warhol designed the album cover for the Rolling Stones' album Sticky Fingers. The well endowed male crotch on the front was one of the Factory regulars. Warhol took shots of several friends and kept the identity of the chosen crotch a secret, although many spectulate that it was either Joe Dallesandro or Corey Tippin. The photograph contained an unzippable fly. Both album covers are widely regarded as some of the greatest album art of all time.
Warhol included the Velvet Underground in the Exploding Plastic Inevitable, a mix of art rock, Warhol films and belly dancers. They used the Factory as a place to rehearse.
Walk on the Wild Side, Lou Reed's best known song from his solo career, was released on his first commercially successful solo album Transformer. The song is about the superstars he hung out with at the Factory. He mentions Holly Woodlawn, Candy Darling, Joe Dallesandro, Jackie Curtis and Joe Campbell (referred to in the song by his Factory nickname Sugar Plum Fairy).
However, by making the films, Warhol created a sexually lenient environment at the Factory for the happenings that they staged, such as fake drag weddings, porn theater rentals, and vulgar plays. A large amount of free love took place in the scene, as sexuality in the 1960's was becoming more open. The Factory is where Lou Reed had sex with Billy Name, as did Warhol and many others. Sex was practically a must for anyone hanging around, and was encouraged by Warhol, who used footage of sexual acts between his friends in his work.
Also part of 'the scene' at the factory were Holly Woodlawn, Jackie Curtis, and Candy Darling. As an artist, Andy Warhol frequently used these girls and other sexual non-conformists in his films, plays, and on-goings. While drag queens and transsexuals had previously been viewed by society as just freaks and depressing weirdos, Andy Warhol made them sexual radicals.
Because of the constant drug use and the presence of sexually liberal artists and radicals, drugged orgies were a frequent happening at the Factory. Andy met friend Ondine at an orgy in 1962.
Ondine "I was at an orgy, and he was, ah, this great presence in the back of the room. And this orgy was run by a friend of mine, and, so, I said to this person, 'Would you please mind throwing that thing *
Warhol would often arrange three or four friends on the red couch they had in the middle of the Factory, and film them having sex. Couch and Blow Job are two examples.
1963
Later movies were filmed away from the Factory, or in another one of Warhol's New York apartments.
1960s | Andy Warhol | Pop art
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It uses material from the
"The Factory".
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