Andy Warhol (1928-1987) (after) - Campbell´s Soup I · Complete set of the 10 soup variants
編號 84257631
Andy Warhol (after) - "Campbell´s Soup I: Tomato, 1968" - (60x100cm)
編號 84257631
Andy Warhol (after) - "Campbell´s Soup I: Tomato, 1968" - (60x100cm)
- Andy Warhol (after), "Campbell´s Soup I: Tomato, 1968". Art print on heavyweight smooth matte paper (250gsm approx.).
- Authorized edition 2013. Copyright The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. and Trademarks licensed by Campbell Soup Company.
- Size: 60 x 100 cm
- Condition: excellent. Never framed, never exposed.
- Andy Warhol, born Andrew Warhola on August 6, 1928, was a prominent artist of the pop art movements of the 1960s. He ventured into a wide variety of art forms, including performing arts, film, video installations and writing, and controversially blurred the line between fine arts and mainstream aesthetics. Warhol's work focused on celebrities and mass-produced commercial products, reflecting both the supposed emptiness of American material culture and her lack of emotional involvement in his artistic practice.
One of Warhol's most emblematic series is the one in which he represents cans of Campbell's soup. This series is one of the first in which Warhol used screen printing and was one of the first publications of Factory Additions, a company that Warhol developed to distribute his prints.
These works are a perfect example of how Warhol transformed everyday, recognizable objects into art, a hallmark of his contribution to the Pop Art movement.
In terms of the value of Warhol's work, his artwork has seen a compound annual growth rate of 24% over the last five years, and the auction price for the limited edition prints will range between £2000 and £4,070,148 in 2022. The highest price ever paid for a Warhol painting was for “Shot Sage Blue Marilyn (1964),” which sold for a staggering $195,040,000 at Christie's New York. This sale set a new record, making it the most expensive work of 20th century art ever sold. Warhol's enduring popularity and influence make him a sought-after artist on the secondary market.
Some artists of similar importance: Basquiat, Hockney, Lichtenstein, Miro, Banksy, Brainwash, Delaunay, Nara, Soulages, Lagasse, Ramos, Lautrec, Klimt, Matisse, Hirst, Coa, Chagall, Koons, Haring, Indiana, Mondrian, Groening, Richter, Monroe, Kusama, Murakami, Testa, Villemot, Oldenburg, Hopper, Ripolles, Wesselmann, Magritte, Jenk, Orlinski, Wille, Rizzi, Manara, Thiebaud, Cappiello, Rothko, Dalí, among others.