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Warhol, Andy

ANDY WARHOL Portrait of Ingrid Bergman with Hat, 1983

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Regular price $250
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Ingrid Bergman as Herself, published by Galerie Börjeson in Malmö in 1983, is one of the most elegant portraits from Andy Warhol’s celebrated Bergman series. In this striking composition, Bergman’s golden hair and crimson lips glow beneath a bold magenta hat, set against a luminous cobalt background. The color contrasts are quintessentially Warhol — vibrant yet controlled, creating an image that feels cinematic, modern, and timeless all at once.

Each impression from this series carries Warhol’s printed signature, adding a distinctive mark of authenticity that makes these editions especially collectible. Printed on glossy paper to emulate the look of a silkscreen, the surface radiates light and depth, highlighting Warhol’s fascination with beauty, fame, and image. Framed in a clean white wood frame, this piece captures the height of 1980s Pop sophistication and remains a standout example of Warhol’s late portraiture — a radiant homage to one of cinema’s most enduring icons.

Presented in a white wood frame with a 1-inch front profile and a 3/4-inch side profile, the artwork is mounted behind a 4-inch mat, creating a refined, gallery-style display that highlights Warhol’s iconic imagery.

Details

Sku: GH2931

Artist: Andy Warhol

Title: Portrait of Ingrid Bergman with Hat

Year: 1983

Signed: No

Medium: Offset Lithograph

Edition Size: Unknown

Framed: Yes

Condition: A: Mint

Dimensions

Paper Size: 8 x 8 inches ( 20 x 20 cm )

Image Size: 8 x 8 inches ( 20 x 20 cm )

Frame Size: H: 18 x W: 18 x D: .75 in.

ANDY WARHOL Portrait of Ingrid Bergman with Hat, 1983

$250

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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