New Novel about “Andrei” Warhol
by Alexander Motyl
A new novel by Alexander J. Motyl, Who Killed Andrei Warhol: The American Diary of a Soviet Journalist, published by Seven Locks Press.
Who Killed Andrei Warhol is
an absurdist tragicomedy that imagines a friendship between pop artist Andy
Warhol and a straight-laced Soviet Ukrainian journalist who arrives in New York at the height
of the garbage strike in early 1968 to cover the impending American Revolution.
The journalist, Sasha Ivanov, comes to reside at the Chelsea Hotel;
he also has an office at the Communist Party USA headquarters, located in the
same building as Warhol’s “Factory” studio on Union Square. As Ivanov struggles to
understand life in New York,
he decides that his fellow Ukrainian worker, “Andrei” Warhol, is a socialist
realist painter, a proletarian genius, and a passionate Leninist. In the
process, Ivanov has an affair with Warhol’s would-be assassin, Valerie Solanas,
and gets implicated in intrigues involving the FBI, the KGB, the Communist
Party, the Black Panthers, and the Students for a Democratic Society at Columbia University. The novel features cameo
appearances by Communist Party leader Gus Hall, the FBI’s Communist “mole”
Morris Childs, and a range of Warhol’s “superstars”. Ivanov also visits
Warhol’s home and becomes a close friend of his mother, Julia Zawacka, who
plies him with potato dumplings, vodka, and memories of the old country.
Andy Warhol was born in Pittsburgh into a
working-class family of Rusyn-Ukrainian background. “This side of Warhol’s life
has remained completely unexplored,” says Motyl. “It’s as if living the first
twenty years of one’s life in an insular ethnic community that barely spoke
English could not have affected one’s later life and work. Ukrainians like me
who grew up in New York’s Lower
East Side know that can’t be true.”
Motyl initially wanted to
write a scholarly study of this side of Warhol’s life. “But when, while doing
research on Warhol, I discovered that his Factory was in the same building as
the Communist Party USA, I knew I had stumbled upon a fact that was almost too
good to be true. This coincidence just begged for some kind of literary
exploration. Having Warhol meet a Ukrainian Communist, who would misinterpret
him as a socialist realist, seemed like an obvious device for exploring
questions of art and identity. After all, who decides what Warhol’s art is—the New York art world or
the Communist Party? And what’s the difference?”
“The funny thing is that, as
preposterous as it may seem to view Warhol as a socialist realist,” continues
Motyl, “it’s no more preposterous than much of what passes for literary and
artistic criticism today. In that sense, the novel is also a satire of
contemporary postmodern thinking, which unintentionally manages to make sense
of nonsense and nonsense of sense in ways that can only be termed hilarious.”
New York City
also figures prominently in the novel, as Ivanov explores the sights and sounds
of a city that he, as an orthodox Marxist, cannot understand. “Sasha visits my New York—those parts of
the city that I’ve known and now miss. Some of the novel is a walk down memory
lane for me.” Sasha gets mugged on Union
Square, eats pizza in Chelsea,
orders duck in Chinatown, and drinks vodka
with bums on the Bowery. He even attends a rock concert at the Ukrainian
National Home on Second Avenue.
Who Killed Andrei Warhol is
Motyl’s second novel. The first, Whiskey Priest, was published by
iUniverse in 2005. Motyl is also author of six academic books and numerous
articles.
A native New Yorker, Motyl is professor of
political science and deputy director of the Division of Global Affairs at
Rutgers University-Newark. He served as associate director of the Harriman
Institute at Columbia
University in 1992-1998.
Motyl is also a painter; he is represented by The Tori Collection, and his work
is on display at www.toricollection.com.
Who Killed Andrei Warhol may
be ordered directly from Seven Locks Press (www.sevenlockspublishing.com) as
well as from Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com.