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This image of Warhol posing with a bellboy was likely taken in Beijing's Peking Hotel. Over 200 personal photos from Warhol's 1982 visit to China will go under the hammer at a Phillips auction at the Mandarin Oriental in Hong Kong on May 28.
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Warhol visited the Great Wall of China during his three-day trip to Beijing. According to photographer Christopher Makos, who accompanied Warhol on the trip, the man in the leather jacket is probably documentary maker Lee Caplin.
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Here Warhol is mimicking a Tai Chi pose, likely in Beijing's Peking Hotel. The late pop artist allegedly wore the same outfit every day during the trip.
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No stranger to using bananas in his artwork, Warhol captured this iced fruit item during a buffet meal. Curator Jeffrey Dietsch, who was on the trip, said: "The food was superb but Andy was not a foodie... he was more interested in the experience."
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The hotel bellboy in stitched photograph form. This method eventually became synonymous with Warhol's work -- photographer Christopher Makos claims to have introduced him to it.
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Warhol was reportedly fascinated with the design of advertising and signage in China during his visit. "For someone who was all about pop art, it was pretty clear that it was a good place to be at that moment," says Makos.
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Phillips auction house have placed high artistic value on Warhol's personal photos from his trip to China but Christopher Makos, the photographer who accompanied him, says they are just "snapshots" that are being over-hyped.
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This image shows a dustbin featuring a traditional Chinese-style lion. Warhol said: "I just paint things I always thought were beautiful, things you use every day and never think about."
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In the 1970s Warhol created a series of colorful portraits of Mao Zedong based on the late Chinese leader's portrait in Tiananmen Square, which he visited. He also saw various Mao statues, such as this one, around Beijing.
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A geometric shot of the now demolished Furama Hotel. Warhol was accompanied by curator Jeffrey Dietsch on the Hong Kong leg of the China trip. "We did tours all over Hong Kong -- The Peak, the ferry, all the usual things," said Dietch.
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When Warhol visited the Great Wall of China he quipped: "Where's the escalator?" He also reportedly complained about a lack of McDonald's restaurants in the country.
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This Hong Kong tram was originally mistakenly marked up as a "bus" by Warhol, when he titled it Double Decker Bus.
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Construction work in Hong Kong. Warhol's personal collection of photos from the trip may fetch up to $1.1 million in total by Phillips auction house.
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Warhol liked to feature everyday items in his works, leading Phillips auction house to brand this photo an "almost Chinese take on some signature Warhol images."
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Warhol was famous in the western world during the time of his China visit, but was rarely recognized as a celebrity during the trip, allowing him to take photos such as this temple shot largely undisturbed.
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"The white body of the ferry cuts through half the image to create an interesting geometric interplay between the various elements in the shot," according to Phillips.
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Hong Kong's former Supreme Court and the Bank of China buildings feature in the photo.
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A photo showing Hong Kong's Sandy Bay. Curator Jeffrey Dietsch said that during the Hong Kong leg of the trip Warhol took his photos quickly: "He didn't stop to say 'hold on'... it was an extension of the way he perceived the world."
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Warhol went to Hong Kong as the guest of nightclub owner Alfred Siu, who commissioned him to take portraits of Princess Diana and Prince Charles for his nightclub, I-Club.
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In the early 1980s bicycles were enormously popular in Beijing, which was yet to embrace the motorcar as the primary method of transport for the public. "It was a very fast-paced trip," says photographer Christopher Makos. "They tried to jam in as much as possible."
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This painting by Warhol was inspired by his Beijing trip. During his time there he said: "I've got to get into sign painting. Words. Word paintings." Chinese characters featured in his body of work after this trip.
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Chinese characters painted by Warhol, dating from 1984-1985, shortly after his 1982 visit to China. It reads: "Science".

Story highlights

A collection of photographs from Andy Warhol's 1982 trip to China are up for auction

Despite the high asking prices, questions have been raised about their artistic merit

CNN  — 

Andy Warhol’s personal photographs from his trip to Beijing and Hong Kong in 1982 are arguably the most famous holiday snaps of all time.

And depending on how a May auction of the collection fares, they could soon be among the most valuable.

Warhol, who was one of the most famous people in the western world at the time of his visit, went largely unrecognized on the streets of Beijing. It makes the images even more remarkable, not least to collectors, who have come to view the set as a rare slice of history in the making. 

The three-day trip saw the late pop art icon take his camera to sites including the Great Wall and Tiananmen Square, where he came face-to-face with the portrait of Mao Zedong that had inspired his own colorful 1970s paintings and prints of the former leader.

Over 200 personal photos from Warhol’s China set will go under the hammer at a Phillips auction at the Mandarin Oriental in Hong Kong. The candid shots are currently on display at the hotel, to coincide with the opening of Art Basel Hong Kong.

Phillips’ associate director Charlotte Raybaud tells CNN the auction house is hoping to sell the set for over $1.1 million (HK$8.5 million).

“The photos capture his personality in a way that may even be more genuine and pure than the pictures he takes prior to this, because he came to Beijing and Hong Kong as a tourist,” she says.

Rich Phillips/CNN
"Andy Warhol at the Great Wall of China," by Andy Warhol, 1982

High art?

But should the photos, a separate set to the more conventional images taken on the trip by Warhol’s traveling companion, photographer Christopher Makos, be considered high-art?

To some, like curator Jeffrey Deitch – who also accompanied Warhol for the Hong Kong leg of the trip – they represent great examples of the New Yorker’s artistic vision.

“Andy was not making art in a precious way,” he said. “It was so inside him – this unique vision of the world. They’re very strong images, not just random snapshots.”

phillips
"Andy Warhol and Bellboy," by Andy Warhol, 1982

To others, like Makos, the merit attributed to the photos by the Phillips auction is “ridiculous” and “nonsense.”

“(They were) snapshots. Andy was never thinking about the light and dark, he was hoping he had the settings right and that’s it,” says the photographer.

Warhol the tourist

Warhol traveled to Hong Kong at the invitation of Alfred Siu, a young local entrepreneur, who had commissioned Warhol to paint portraits of Princess Diana and Prince Charles for a new nightclub he was opening on the island.

Upon arrival, Siu surprised the artist by announcing he had arranged for him to visit Beijing – a city which was then still largely closed-off to foreigners.

And while Deitch and Makos continue to argue about the artistic value of Warhol’s photography, they agree that the trip across the border into the mainland was particularly special.

“Andy and I loved looking out and seeing a sea of blue or green outfits,” says Makos of his time in the Chinese capital.

“We thought it was chic, like Pierre Cardin or something. Women were starting to experiment with western clothing, and because they weren’t familiar with it they were such bad dressers, they didn’t know how to put things together.”

© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Andy Warhol c. 1972
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Yves Saint Laurent and Bianca Jagger, Venice
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Jane Forth and Max Delys, on the set of "L'Amour," Paris, 1970
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Jack Nicholson, 1972
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Candy Darling, 1969
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Andy Warhol, 1970
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Dolly Parton, 1985
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Audrey Hepburn, 1973
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.
Jean-Michel Basquiat, 1983

 Locals in turn, were also curious about Warhol.

“People were fascinated by his look,” recalls Makos “Like, ‘Who is this?’”

The artist’s status as a regular tourist rather than a global celebrity is evidenced throughout the exhibition.

In one image, he is seen standing with a bellboy, likely in Beijing’s Peking Hotel in which he stayed. In others, he captures everyday holiday items such as buffet food and a beer bottle on a restaurant table.

“Andy was about the everyday, the mundane, creating, in an accumulated way, something of tremendous interest,” Deitch tells CNN.

Photographs from the “Warhol in China” collection are on display at the Mandarin Oriental Hong Kong from 20 March until 2 April. The photographs will be auctioned by Phillips on 28 May.

Jamie Fullerton is a freelance writer based in Beijing.