Andy Warhol American, 1928-1987
Electric Chair (FS II.81), 1971
Screenprint in Colour
90.1 x 121.9 cm
35 47/100 x 47 99/100 in.
35 47/100 x 47 99/100 in.
Andy Warhol’s Electric Chair (FS II.81) is a powerful and unsettling piece from his Death and Disaster series, created in 1971. In this screenprint, Warhol depicts an empty electric chair...
Andy Warhol’s Electric Chair (FS II.81) is a powerful and unsettling piece from his Death and Disaster series, created in 1971. In this screenprint, Warhol depicts an empty electric chair in a vacant execution chamber, stripped of human presence yet charged with an eerie stillness. The image, based on a press photograph from Sing Sing prison, becomes a symbol of institutional violence and the silence surrounding state-sanctioned death.
In FS II.81, Warhol uses a vivid red and orange palette, intensifying the psychological impact of the image. The bold, almost garish colors contrast sharply with the grim subject, amplifying its emotional tension. This juxtaposition between Pop Art’s bright aesthetic and the dark theme of execution is central to the work’s haunting effect.
By repeating this image in various colorways, Warhol invites viewers to confront their own desensitization to violence and how mass media turns tragedy into spectacle. Electric Chair (FS II.81) is not just a commentary on capital punishment, but also a reflection on how society processes—and often distances itself from—the reality of death.
This work remains one of Warhol’s most arresting and provocative meditations on mortality, absence, and the unsettling power of images.
In FS II.81, Warhol uses a vivid red and orange palette, intensifying the psychological impact of the image. The bold, almost garish colors contrast sharply with the grim subject, amplifying its emotional tension. This juxtaposition between Pop Art’s bright aesthetic and the dark theme of execution is central to the work’s haunting effect.
By repeating this image in various colorways, Warhol invites viewers to confront their own desensitization to violence and how mass media turns tragedy into spectacle. Electric Chair (FS II.81) is not just a commentary on capital punishment, but also a reflection on how society processes—and often distances itself from—the reality of death.
This work remains one of Warhol’s most arresting and provocative meditations on mortality, absence, and the unsettling power of images.
