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Andy Warhol $16-50k

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Fine art from $16k to $50k for sale. Your acquisition comes with our Certificate of Authenticity, museum-archival framing, and historical documentation.

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All Art (180)
Screen Prints (175)
Drawings (2)
Paintings (44)
Silkscreens (4)
Photoengravings (0)
Photography (0)
All Art (180)
Ads Series, 1985 (8)
Reigning Queens, 1985 (0)
Reigning Queens Royal Edition with Diamond Dust, 1985 (10)
Details from Renaissance Paintings, 1984 (6)
Endangered Species, 1983 (8)
Campbell's Soup, 1968 (6)
Cow Wallpaper, 1966 - 1976 (0)
Ladies and Gentlemen Series, 1975 (10)
Bamba Series 2018-2020 (0)
Flowers Series, 1970 (10)
Marilyn Monroe (10)
(0)
Birth of Venus (0)
Beethoven Series, 1987 (2)
Muhammad Ali Series, 1978 (1)
Hans Christian Andersen Series, 1987 (8)
Cowboys and Indians Series, 1986 (10)
Goethe Series, 1982 (4)
Ingrid Bergman Series, 1983 (0)
Grapes Series, 1979 (3)
Gems Series, 1978 (0)
Flash-November 22, 1963 Series, 1968 (11)
Cologne Cathedral Series, 1985 (4)
Myths Series, 1981 (10)
Electric Chair, 1971 (3)
Camouflage Series, 1987 (8)
Mick Jagger Portfolio, 1975 (10)
Mao Portfolio, 1972 (4)
Dollar Sign Portfolios, 1982 (5)
Shoes Series, 1980 (4)
Ten Portraits of Jews of the Twentieth Century Series, 1980 (0)
Saint Apollonia Series 1984 (2)
Skulls 1976 (1)
Hammer and Sickle 1977 (0)
Hammer and Sickle (Special Edition) 1977 (0)
Space Fruit: Still Lifes 1979 (0)
Sunset 1972 (0)
(10)
Martha Graham 1986 (2)
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Andy Warhol Screen Print, II, from Shadows IV, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
II, from Shadows IV, 1979
Sold ID # w-12847
Andy Warhol Screen Print, II, from Shadows V, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
II, from Shadows V, 1979
Sold ID # w-12849
Andy Warhol Screen Print, III, from Shadows I, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
III, from Shadows I, 1979
Sold ID # w-12830
Andy Warhol Screen Print, III, from Shadows II, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
III, from Shadows II, 1979
Sold ID # w-12836
Andy Warhol Screen Print, III, from Shadows III, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
III, from Shadows III, 1979
Sold ID # w-12842
Andy Warhol Screen Print, IV, from Shadows I, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
IV, from Shadows I, 1979
Sold ID # w-12831
Andy Warhol Screen Print, IV, from Shadows II, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
IV, from Shadows II, 1979
Sold ID # w-12837
Andy Warhol Screen Print, IV, from Shadows III, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
IV, from Shadows III, 1979
Sold ID # w-12843
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Jacqueline Kennedy I (Jackie I), 1966
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jacqueline Kennedy I (Jackie I), 1966
Sold ID # w-12782
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Jacqueline Kennedy II (Jackie II), 1966
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jacqueline Kennedy II (Jackie II), 1966
Sold ID # w-12783
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Jacqueline Kennedy III (Jackie III), 1966
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jacqueline Kennedy III (Jackie III), 1966
Sold ID # w-12784
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Jane Fonda, 1982
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jane Fonda, 1982
Sold ID # w-12860
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Jean Cocteau, 1985
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jean Cocteau, 1985
Sold ID # w-12870
No image available
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jimmy Carter I, 1976
Sold ID # w-12818
No image available
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jimmy Carter II, 1977
Sold ID # w-12819
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Jimmy Carter III, 1977
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Jimmy Carter III, 1977
Sold ID # w-12820
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Joseph Beuys I, 1980
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Joseph Beuys I, 1980
Sold ID # w-12852
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Joseph Beuys II, 1980
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Joseph Beuys II, 1980
Sold ID # w-12853
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Joseph Beuys III, 1980
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Joseph Beuys III, 1980
Sold ID # w-12854
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Joseph Beuys in Memoriam, 1986
Andy Warhol Screen Print for sale
Joseph Beuys in Memoriam, 1986
Sold ID # w-12873
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Joseph Beuys, 1980-83
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Joseph Beuys, 1980-83
Sold ID # w-12851
No image available
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Kiss, 1966
Sold ID # w-12775
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975
Sold ID # w-12815
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975
Sold ID # w-12816
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Lenin, 1987
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Lenin, 1987
Sold ID # w-12875
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Lillian Carter, 1977
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Lillian Carter, 1977
Sold ID # w-12821
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Lincoln Center Ticket, 1967
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Lincoln Center Ticket, 1967
Sold ID # w-12788
No image available
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Love I, 1983
Sold ID # w-12865
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Love II, 1983
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Love II, 1983
Sold ID # w-12866
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Love III, 1983
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Love III, 1983
Sold ID # w-12867
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Man Ray, 1974
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Man Ray, 1974
Sold ID # w-12817
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Mao, 1973
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Mao, 1973
Sold ID # w-12790
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Mao, 1974
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Mao, 1974
Sold ID # w-12814
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn), 1967
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn), 1967
Sold ID # w-12789
Andy Warhol Lithograph, Marilyn Monroe I Love Your Kiss Forever Forever, 1964
Andy Warhol Lithograph
Marilyn Monroe I Love Your Kiss Forever Forever, 1964
Sold ID # w-12774
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Merce Cunningham I, 1974
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Merce Cunningham I, 1974
Sold ID # w-12812
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Merce Cunningham II, 1979
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Merce Cunningham II, 1979
Sold ID # w-12813
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Mildred Scheel, 1980
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Mildred Scheel, 1980
Sold ID # w-12850
No image available
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Moonwalk, 1987
Sold ID # w-12877
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Neuschwanstein, 1987
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Neuschwanstein, 1987
Sold ID # w-12874
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Paris Review, 1967
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Paris Review, 1967
Sold ID # w-12787
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Pete Rose, 1985
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Pete Rose, 1985
Sold ID # w-12872
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Piero della Francesca, Madonna del Duca da Montefeltro, from Details of Renaissance Paintings Series, 1984
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Piero della Francesca, Madonna del Duca da Montefeltro, from Details of Renaissance Paintings Series, 1984
Sold ID # w-12868
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Portrait of the Artists, 1967
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Portrait of the Artists, 1967
Sold ID # w-12785
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Purple Cows, 1967
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Purple Cows, 1967
Sold ID # w-12786
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Red Lenin, 1987
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Red Lenin, 1987
Sold ID # w-12876
Andy Warhol Lithograph, S&H Green Stamps, 1965
Andy Warhol Lithograph
S&H Green Stamps, 1965
Sold ID # w-12776
Andy Warhol Screen Print, Sachiko, 1977
Andy Warhol Screen Print
Sachiko, 1977
Sold ID # w-12823
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Buy Original Andy Warhol Signed and Numbered Artwork For Sale

Andy Warhol's Pop Art legacy continues to inspire various forms of contemporary aesthetic expression. Our collection of hand-signed Warhol screen prints includes pop art subjects of Mick Jagger, Mickey Mouse, Superman, Moonwalk, Flowers, Marilyn Monroe, Mao, Cow, and Campbell's Soup, and are of higher collectible value due to their distinct color variations and one-of-a-kind nature.

Genres: Contemporary Masters Pop Art American Portraiture Americana Popular Culture Post War Contemporary

Have one to sell? Sell Andy Warhol fine art with us

Sell Andy Warhol artwork with us. We will research its value and popularity for you.

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Andy Warhol Biography

Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol artist

The American artist and filmmaker Andy Warhol was born Andrew Warhola in 1928. There has for years been quite a bit of confusion to where and when Andy Warhol was born, but according to Andy’s two older brothers and the birth certificate that was filed in Pittsburgh in 1945, he was born on August 6th in Pittsburgh. Whether or not this is the day he was born hasn’t been proved, but it was on this date he would celebrate his birthday. However, there is no doubt that he died at 6:31 A.M. on Sunday, February 22nd, 1987, at the New York Hospital after a gallbladder operation. He is considered a founder and major figure of the POP ART movement. A graduate of the Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1949, he moved to New York City and gained success as a commercial artist. He got his first break in August 1949, when Glamour Magazine wanted him to illustrate a feature entitled “Success is a Job in New York”. But by accident the credit read “Drawings by Andy Warhol” and that’s how Andy dropped the “a” in his last name. He continued doing ads and illustrations and by 1955 he was the most successful and imitated commercial artist in New York. In 1960 he produced the first of his paintings depicting enlarged comic strip images – such as Popeye and Superman – initially for use in a window display.

Warhol pioneered the development of the process whereby an enlarged photographic image is transferred to a silk screen that is then placed on a canvas and inked from the back. Each Warhol silkscreen used this technique that enabled him to produce the series of mass-media images – repetitive, yet with slight variations – that he began in 1962. These iconic Andy Warhol prints, incorporating such items as Campbell’s Soup cans, dollar bills, Coca-Cola bottles, flowers, and the faces of celebrities, can be taken as comments on the banality, harshness, and ambiguity of American culture.

Later in the 1960s, Warhol made a series of experimental films dealing with such ideas as time, boredom, and repetition; they include Sleep (1963), Empire (1964), and The Chelsea Girls (1966). In 1965 he started working with a rock band called “The Velvet Underground” formed by Lou Reed and John Cale. Andy introduced them to the model and movie star Nico and she sang on their debut album from 1967 “The Velvet Underground and Nico”. Andy would travel around the country, not only with The Velvets, but also with superstar of the year Edie Sedgwick and the light show “The Exploding Plastic Inevitable”.

On June 3rd, 1968, Valerie Solanis, a rejected superstar, came into The Factory and shot Andy three times in the chest. He was rushed to hospital where he was pronounced dead, but after having his chest cut up and been given heart massage, he survived. Valerie Solanis turned herself in that night and was put in a mental institution. She was later given a three year prison sentence. After recovering Andy Warhol continued to work. He founded inter/VIEW magazine in 1969 (they changed the name to Interview in 1971), published The Philosophy of Andy Warhol: From A to B and Back Again in 1975 and continued to paint portraits until his death in 1987.

Also browse our collection of Keith Haring pop art.

WARHOL PAINTINGS

In the 1960s, Warhol began his most prolific period as an artist. He had already begun making a name for himself in the commercial art world, yet he desired to known as a fine artist as well. He began converting the themes of advertisements into large-scale graphic canvases. To make his large-scale graphic canvases, Warhol projected an enlarged image onto a canvas on the wall. He would subsequently work freehand, without a pencil, rendering a painterly result. In order to develop his own niche in painting, his friends suggested he paint the things he loved the most. The result was the iconic Campbell’s Soup Cans, 1962. Warhol said of Campbell’s Soup “I used to drink it. I used to have the same lunch every day, for 20 years, I guess, the same thing over and over again.” Though the works resemble mass-produced advertisements, they were painted by projecting the images onto a canvas and stenciled afterwards. This way, Warhol removes evidence of an artist’s hand.<

WARHOL PHOTOGRAPHY

Though best known for his silkscreens and paintings, Warhol became a passionate photographer later in his life. He carried a camera with him at all times, capturing everything from personal friends to iconic celebrities. The photographs signified his apathy towards social hierarchy and also ranged from black and white 35 mm portraits to Polaroid shots. He approached photography in two ways. In one instance, he created over 500 ‘stitched’ photographs which feature identical images sewn together in a grid form. This was a clear demonstration of his interest in repeated imagery. In another instance, he would only choose a single photo from a set to become a print. The singularity of these works shows a clear separation from Warhol’s typical themes of mass production and repetition. Therefore, photography provided Warhol opportunities to showcase both his private self and his public artistic identity.

WARHOL SCREEN PRINTS

Of his silkscreens, Warhol has said “the reason I’m painting this way is that I want to be a machine, and I feel that whatever I do and do machine-like is what I want to do.” Indeed, machine-like precision and mimicry appear repeatedly in works of this medium. The screenprinting process was a variation of stenciling. Warhol had a streamlined process in producing silk screen prints. First, he laid a photograph on to the mesh of a silk screen. Afterwards, he passed an ink-covered squeegee over the mesh. The ink would pass through the mesh and impress a print of the image onto the canvas underneath. The choice of ink depended on the intended composition of the final product. Warhol was able to apply multiple colors to create a layering effect, thus a different color composition could be made each time. He used a variety of canvases and papers. Warhol’s best known silk screen prints include his iconic portfolio of Marilyn Monroe: Marilyn Monroe (Marilyn), 1967, Elizabeth Taylor (Colored Liz), 1963 and Mick Jagger Portfolio of 10 screenprints, 1975. Producing art in a systematic manner similar to an assembly line, he gave rise to series or portfolios of his beloved celebrities including Andy Warhol's Mao portfolio. Even today, these massively recognizable images serve as a beacon of popular culture.

Warhol’s range as an artist certainly shows in his sculptures and installations. Similar to his other works, his sculptures replicated commercial symbols and ideologies. Of this medium the best known were the series of “grocery carton” works which replicated Heinz Ketchup and Campbell’s tomato juice cans. His best known sculpture from this series is probably his Brillo Boxes,1964. As the name suggests, Warhol applied silkscreened logos of the consumer product onto plywood boxes. The resulting appearance was identical to the logoed boxes often see in supermarkets. These sculptures were first exhibited at the Stable Gallery in 1964 and called to question what can be considered as fine art. When asked about these boxes, Warhol expressed he “wanted something ordinary”. Overall, his sculptural works centered on Warhol’s beloved premise of commercialization.

Enjoy our select collection of Warhol Fine Art.

Browse Andy Warhol Catalogue Raisonnés Online.

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