Campbell's Soup Can I | Andy Warhol (Sunday B. Morning)

Andy Warhol Campbell's soup can NextStreet Gallery Paris
black bean soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
beef soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
Chicken noodle soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
consommé soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
cream of mushroom soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
Pepper pot soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
tomato soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
vegetable soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
green pea soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
onion soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
Andy Warhol Campbell's soup can NextStreet Gallery Paris
black bean soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
beef soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
Chicken noodle soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
consommé soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
cream of mushroom soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
Pepper pot soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
tomato soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
vegetable soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
green pea soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg
onion soup_nextstreetgallery_AndyWarhol.jpg

Campbell's Soup Can I | Andy Warhol (Sunday B. Morning)

from €400.00

YEAR: 2018

CLASSIFICATION: Open edition

DIMENSIONS: 36 × 36 in - 91.4 × 91.4 cm

MEDIUM/MATERIALS: Screenprint on Museum Board

SIGNATURE: Published by Sunday B. Morning - Fill in your own signature

"Campbell’s Soup Can I" is a silkscreen print on Museum Board (open edition) from Sunday B Morning featuring the works of Andy Warhol. The piece is stamped in blue on the back with "Published by Sunday B. Morning" and "fill in your own signature" and is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.

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Obsessed by celebrity, consumer culture, and mechanical (re)production, Pop artist Andy Warhol has created some of the most iconic images of the 20th century.

As famous for his quips as for his art—he variously mused that “art is what you can get away with” and “everyone will be famous for 15 minutes”—Warhol drew widely from popular culture and everyday subject matter, creating works like his 32 Campbell's Soup Cans (1962), Brillo pad box sculptures, and portraits of Marilyn Monroe, using the medium of silk-screen printmaking to achieve his characteristic hard edges and flat areas of color.

Known for his cultivation of celebrity, Factory studio (a radical social and creative melting pot), and avant-garde films like Chelsea Girls (1966), Warhol was also a mentor to artists like Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat. His Pop sensibility is now standard practice, taken up by major contemporary artists Richard Prince, Takashi Murakami, and Jeff Koons, among countless others.