Andy Warhol — "I'm not a real hallucination. I'm a commercial hallucination."
I'm not a real hallucination. I'm a commercial hallucination.
I'm not a real hallucination. I'm a commercial hallucination.
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"I never think that people die. They just go to another room."
"I'm the type who'd be happy not going anywhere as long as I was sure I knew exactly what was happening at the places I wasn't going to."
"They always say that time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself."
"Paintings are too hard. The things I want to show are mechanical. Machines have less problems. I'd like to be a machine, wouldn't you?"
"I used to think that everybody was just being funny but now I don't know. I mean, how can you tell?"
American Pop Art icon whose Factory industrialized image-making and erased the line between commerce and fine art. Closely associated with Roy Lichtenstein (Pop comic-strip painter) and Robert Rauschenberg (combine-painter precursor). For an intellectual contrast, see Mark Rothko, Abstract Expressionist of the deeply personal color field — Rothko stood for emotional depth and singular authorship — exactly what Warhol's silkscreen production line industrially refused.
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