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Warhol, Andy

ANDY WARHOL What's a Warhol?, 1990

Regular price $125
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This poster reproduces Warhol’s playful self-portrait spread originally published in Playboy magazine, featuring seven Polaroid photos of the artist arranged in a grid. Created posthumously in 1990, the offset lithograph captures Warhol’s fascination with self-image, fame, and mass-media presentation.

A blend of humor, irony, and celebrity awareness, the composition reflects Warhol’s lifelong exploration of how identity is manufactured and consumed. The candid Polaroids—some posed, some spontaneous—reveal Warhol both as subject and narrator of his own mythology.

Printed on quality stock, this authorized edition celebrates the Pop Art icon at his most self-referential, echoing his famous line: “I’m not more intelligent than I appear.” A distinctive collectible for admirers of Warhol’s photography, Pop Art ephemera, and vintage magazine culture.

Details

Sku: YY6345

Artist: Andy Warhol

Title: What's a Warhol?

Year: 1990

Signed: No

Medium: Offset Lithograph

Edition Size: Unknown

Framed: No

Frame Suggestion: Inquire with our experts for framing suggestions.

Condition: A-: Near Mint, very light signs of handling

Dimensions

Paper Size: 24 x 35 inches ( 61 x 89 cm )

Image Size: 20 x 32 inches ( 51 x 81 cm )

ANDY WARHOL What's a Warhol?, 1990

$125

About the Artist

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol made art out of things people usually ignore. Cans of soup, famous faces, dollar signs, newspaper photos. He chose these images because they were already everywhere. By repeating them, he forced people to actually look at how much power everyday images have. What Warhol changed was the idea of what art could be about. He showed that fame, money, and attention all work in similar ways. If you see something enough times, it starts to feel important. His work helped people understand how modern culture creates value, not through meaning, but through visibility.
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