News

This month marks the 40th anniversary of the Commodore Amiga’s release. Alongside contemporaries like the Macintosh and Acorn ...
The Nasher Museum of Art exhibition rewards close engagement with the works, their manner of production, and what Warhol’s world might have been like behind the scenes.
In 1989, Joe Simon, a film producer and art collector based in New York and California, bought Andy Warhol’s “Red Self-Portrait” silkscreen from a respected London art dealer for $195,000.
The Andy Warhol Museum, one of four in the Carnegie Museums, where the pop art pops and fascinating exhibits get at least 15 minutes of fame.
Warhol altered the photograph, and Vanity Fair ran an isolated image of Prince’s face, tinted purple against an orange background. But Warhol, who died in 1987, had actually created 16 images ...
The Art Institute of Chicago has a bunch of Andy Warhol silk-screens showing Marilyn Monroe. To my eye, they’re not all equally riveting. But for Warhol, the idea that they might be was part of ...
The art that came in from the cold -- Failures of containment: the case of postwar abstraction -- The development of Andy Warhol's pop eye -- Socialist realism and Gerhard Richter's 'third way' -- ...
Andy Warhol wasn’t allowed to use a photographer’s portrait of Prince for a series of pop-art images, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Thursday in a decision limiting the reach of the fair use ...
In 2003, Richard Dorment received a call from a man named Joe Simon, a film producer who had bought a print of Andy Warhol’s “Red Self-Portrait” in 1989 for $195,000. Mr.
Vanity Fair ran just one of the images Warhol created, the purple-faced Prince, with its 1984 story. The article, titled “Purple Fame,” came shortly after the release of Prince’s hit ...