Andy Warhol — "The biggest price you pay for love is that you have to have somebody around, you…"
The biggest price you pay for love is that you have to have somebody around, you can't be on your own, which is always so much better.
The biggest price you pay for love is that you have to have somebody around, you can't be on your own, which is always so much better.
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"I'm not a real reflection. I'm a commercial reflection."
"Sometimes, people let the same problem make them miserable for years when they could just say, so what. That is one of my favourite things to say. So what."
"I'm not a real student. I'm a commercial student."
"I think an artist is anybody who does something well, like if you cook well."
"Do you think the world can be saved? No."
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.
Cynical view on the cost of love, from his book The Philosophy of Andy Warhol (From A to B and Back Again).
Date: 1975
Love & RelationshipsFound in 1 providers: gemini
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