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exclusive Andy Warhol Skateboard Art THE SKATEROOM red 16 Self Portrait Edition bottom
exclusive Andy Warhol Skateboard Art THE SKATEROOM red 16 Self Portrait Edition top
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)

Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)

À propos

Édition de 1

« Je n’ai jamais voulu être peintre ; je voulais être danseur de claquettes. » – Andy Warhol.

THE SKATEROOM est fier de présenter le fruit exceptionnel de dix années de collaboration avec la Fondation Andy Warhol : la première collection limitée à 100 exemplaires d’Autoportraits , en partenariat avec la Fondation Brant.

Chaque édition de la collection est unique, avec sa propre teinte et une photographie polaroid exclusive d'Andy Warhol en son centre.

Vue rapide
exclusive Andy Warhol Skateboard Art THE SKATEROOM red 16 Self Portrait Edition bottom
exclusive Andy Warhol Skateboard Art THE SKATEROOM red 16 Self Portrait Edition top
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Autoportraits (Rouge - 16)
Vue rapide
Portrait of Andy WARHOL

About the Artist

Portrait of Andy WARHOL

Before assuming his place in history, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) as a commercial illustrator in New York for over a decade. Although he began painting in the late 1950s, he emerged into the spotlight in 1962 when he exhibited wooden replicas of Brillo soap pad boxes, along with paintings of Coca-Cola bottles, and his infamous Campbell’s soup cans. Warhol’s mass-producing silkscreen technique was key in reducing his depictions into insipid and dehumanized cultural icons that reflected the alleged emptiness of American material culture, along with Warhol’s own emotional withdrawal towards his creations. Eventually, Warhol’s work propelled him to the forefront of the emerging Pop art movement in America.

Before assuming his place in history, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) as a commercial illustrator in New York for over a decade. Although he began painting in the late 1950s, he emerged into the spotlight in 1962 when he exhibited wooden replicas of Brillo soap pad boxes, along with paintings of Coca-Cola b
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Before assuming his place in history, Andy Warhol (1928-1987) as a commercial illustrator in New York for over a decade. Although he began painting in the late 1950s, he emerged into the spotlight in 1962 when he exhibited wooden replicas of Brillo soap pad boxes, along with paintings of Coca-Cola bottles, and his infamous Campbell’s soup cans. Warhol’s mass-producing silkscreen technique was key in reducing his depictions into insipid and dehumanized cultural icons that reflected the alleged emptiness of American material culture, along with Warhol’s own emotional withdrawal towards his creations. Eventually, Warhol’s work propelled him to the forefront of the emerging Pop art movement in America.