Andy Warhol’s Interview (7 volume box set)
In 2004, Steidl published a limited edition seven-volume facsimile edition of the complete first decade (1969 to 1979) of Interview magazine, housed in a screen printed wooden trolley carrying case, which quickly sold out and has since become highly collectible.
Dubbed "The Crystal Ball of Pop Culture" this edition is edited by Sandra Brandt and Ingrid Sischy and published by Edition 7L.
This one is number 1781 of 2000 and the condition is excellent, as new.
Book 1: The Covers.
Book 2: The Pictures.
Book 3: The Interviews.
Book 4: The Andy Warhol Interviews.
Book 5: The Fashion.
Book 6: The Directors.
Book 7: The Back of the Book: Fran Lebowitz. I Cover the Waterfront columns
Plus: 1969 Premier Issue Facsimile
And 2004 October 35th Anniversary Issue.
Founded by Andy Warhol and Gerard Malanga in 1969, Interview magazine developed from the newsletter of the Studio 54 set into the definitive guide to the stars of today and tomorrow.
Interview's brilliant conception was to invite celebrities who might be fans of one another's work to interview each other, eliciting often intimate and revelatory results.
Alongside these interviews are photographs by the cream of celebrity and fashion photography--Robert Mapplethorpe, Francesco Scavullo, Herb Ritts, Ara Gallant, Peter Beard, Bruce Weber, Perry Berenson and others--who are given the opportunity to make some of their most challenging and original work.
Publishers Weekly said on publication:
Andy Warhol's Interview magazine celebrates its 35th anniversary with this spectacular seven-volume retrospective of its first decade. It's a massive, definitive reference that cuts a wide swath through '70s pop culture with vibrant and energetic interviews and photos. It also has the visceral impact of an objet d'art (the books are housed in a Karl Lagerfeld–designed crate with wheels and a retractable handle).
The selected interviews and photos from the first decade have not been reset or resized; each 12"×15" volume offers exact reprints of the magazine's original pages (including spelling errors and original ads).
Each volume is a treasure trove of sparkling, uninhibited and entertaining chats with icons on the rise (Bette Midler, Jack Nicholson, Lily Tomlin), underground favorites (John Waters, Holly Woodlawn, Mary Woronov), living legends (Bette Davis, Butterfly McQueen, Gloria Swanson) and those who defined the '70s (Rona Barrett, Halston, Calvin Klein).
The Covers (which runs 160 pages) reproduces every cover from Interview's first decade in full color.
The Pictures (276 pages) features photo shoots by Robert Mapplethorpe, Herb Ritts, Bruce Weber, Francesco Scavullo and others.
The Interviews (348 pages) offers 123 profiles, including ones of Muhammad Ali, the Andrews Sisters, Gore Vidal, the Talking Heads and Tennessee Williams.
The Andy Warhol Interviews (320 pages) are 77 interviews conducted by Warhol, with such personalities as John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Sophia Loren, and Michael Jackson.
The Fashion (172 pages) chats with designers like Versace, Edith Head and Yves Saint Laurent.
The Directors (148 pages) includes portraits of 45 directors ranging from Cukor, Hitchcock and Capra to the younger generation of Wertmuller, Spielberg and Altman.
The final volume is The Back of the Book, a slim (64 pages) collection of Fran Lebowitz's "I Cover the Waterfront" columns.
What makes Interview's conversations unique is their free-for-all spirit. Warhol brought friends to interviews and taped the marathon session. Transcripts include interruptions for ordering food and drop-by celebrity appearances.
Sometimes even the interviewers shine: a star-struck Angelica Huston interviews Mae West; 12-year-old Tatum O'Neal visits Seventh Avenue designers; and Anthony Perkins meets his future wife, Berry Berenson, when she interviews him. The vastness of this undertaking is matched by the pleasures found on every page.