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Auction archive: Lot number 104

Andy Warhol

Saturday@Phillips
2 Jun 2007
Estimate
US$1,800 - US$2,200
Price realised:
US$7,800
Auction archive: Lot number 104

Andy Warhol

Saturday@Phillips
2 Jun 2007
Estimate
US$1,800 - US$2,200
Price realised:
US$7,800
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Flash-November 22, 1963 1968 Screenprint on paper. 21 x 21 in. (53.3 x 53.3 cm). Signed on verso. This work is from an edition of 200.
Provenance Racolin Press, New York Artist Bio Andy Warhol American • 1928 - 1987 A seminal figure in the Pop Art movement of the early 1960s, Andy Warhol's paintings and screenprints are iconic beyond the scope of Art History, having become universal signifiers of an age. An early career in commercial illustration led to Warhol's appropriation of imagery from American popular culture and insistent concern with the superficial wonder of permanent commodification that yielded a synthesis of word and image, of art and the everyday. Warhol's obsession with creating slick, seemingly mass-produced artworks led him towards the commercial technique of screenprinting, which allowed him to produce large editions of his painted subjects. The clean, mechanical surface and perfect registration of the screenprinting process afforded Warhol a revolutionary absence of authorship that was crucial to the Pop Art manifesto. View More Works

Auction archive: Lot number 104
Auction:
Datum:
2 Jun 2007
Auction house:
Phillips
2 June 2007, 10am 2pm New York
Beschreibung:

Andy Warhol Flash-November 22, 1963 1968 Screenprint on paper. 21 x 21 in. (53.3 x 53.3 cm). Signed on verso. This work is from an edition of 200.
Provenance Racolin Press, New York Artist Bio Andy Warhol American • 1928 - 1987 A seminal figure in the Pop Art movement of the early 1960s, Andy Warhol's paintings and screenprints are iconic beyond the scope of Art History, having become universal signifiers of an age. An early career in commercial illustration led to Warhol's appropriation of imagery from American popular culture and insistent concern with the superficial wonder of permanent commodification that yielded a synthesis of word and image, of art and the everyday. Warhol's obsession with creating slick, seemingly mass-produced artworks led him towards the commercial technique of screenprinting, which allowed him to produce large editions of his painted subjects. The clean, mechanical surface and perfect registration of the screenprinting process afforded Warhol a revolutionary absence of authorship that was crucial to the Pop Art manifesto. View More Works

Auction archive: Lot number 104
Auction:
Datum:
2 Jun 2007
Auction house:
Phillips
2 June 2007, 10am 2pm New York
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