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What’s not inside Warhol ‘time capsules’?

Matt Wrbican is the archivist overseeing the cataloging of the late pop artist Andy Warhol’s 610 “time-capsule’’ boxes in Pittsburgh, with catalogers Molly Tighe (center) and Marie Elia. Matt Wrbican is the archivist overseeing the cataloging of the late pop artist Andy Warhol’s 610 “time-capsule’’ boxes in Pittsburgh, with catalogers Molly Tighe (center) and Marie Elia. (Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press)
By Ramit Plushnick-Masti
Associated Press / September 1, 2009

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PITTSBURGH - A cardboard lid is lifted and four archivists peer inside. A postal box from Paris. Who sent it? Another box: $17,000 in cash. Yet another: An autographed picture of a naked Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.

These are some of the many items workers have uncovered as they sift through 610 cardboard boxes, filing cabinets, and even a shipping container filled with what would be considered junk by most people but has a whole different meaning since it was collected by pop artist Andy Warhol.

The archivists, hired with $600,000 from the Andy Warhol Foundation and several other smaller grants, have six years to comb through everything from taxi cab receipts to fan mail, meticulously cataloging, photographing and, when possible, researching the often bizarre items before entering them into a database.

“He really didn’t like organization and there would be several boxes going at a time,’’ says Matt Wrbican, who is overseeing the cumbersome project.

Warhol was never one to throw things away, Wrbican says. When he died in 1987 at 58, his four-story Manhattan townhouse was packed with stuff: shopping bags filled with antiques, clothes, books and other artifacts from his daily expeditions, boxes, piles of furniture, and even a drawer of gems worth $1 million.

“The only rooms that looked like a normal house were the bathroom and the kitchen,’’ says Wrbican, who has been going through the artist’s things since 1991.

However, there was no rhyme or reason to the collecting until about 1973. That’s when a Warhol associate suggested the artist carry a box around to dump things in. Each “time capsule’’ was filled, taped shut, dated, and sent to a New Jersey storage facility.

In the 18 months since the project began, the archivists have opened 177 boxes - each with an average of 400 items, some with as many as 1,200. Today, Wrbican said, just one of the boxes is insured for the amount of money the time capsule collection was appraised at a few years after Warhol’s death.

This month, the archivists will begin blogging about the “Object of the Week.’’

What could appear: Wrbican’s favorite, a mummified human foot belonging to an ancient Egyptian; a Ramones’ 45 record signed by the punk rock band’s lead singer, Joey Ramone, found by cataloger Marie Elia; or the orange nutbread cataloger Liz Scott discovered (sent to Warhol by one of his Pittsburgh-area cousins with a note telling him to enjoy it with a cup of coffee).

“So he just threw it in a box,’’ Scott laughs, twisting her face to describe the tangy smell that wafted out of the box.

So, you’re wondering, how did Warhol come to possess a poster of a naked Jackie O signed, “For Andy, with enduring affection, Jackie Montauk’’?

As it happens, says Wrbican - who along with other researchers authenticated the signature through handwriting comparisons - Onassis was a frequent visitor to Warhol’s Montauk, N.Y., beachfront estate.

Her second husband, Aristotle Onassis, got a photographer to take pictures of her skinny-dipping. One landed in the hands of Larry Flynt, who turned it into a poster for his porn magazine, Hustler.

Jackie O sent a copy, probably as a joke, to Warhol, according to Wrbican.

“I really doubted it was her signature at first,’’ he says. “But it really matches her writing.’’

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