Andy Warhol — "I never wanted to be an artist. I wanted to be a machine."
I never wanted to be an artist. I wanted to be a machine.
I never wanted to be an artist. I wanted to be a machine.
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"I'm afraid that if you look at a thing long enough, it loses all of its meaning."
"The best thing about a picture is that it never changes, even when the people in it do."
"After being alive, the next hardest work is having sex. Of course, for some people it isn't work because they need the exercise and they've got the energy for the sex and the sex gives them even more …"
"I don't think I'm very interesting."
"I never think that people die. They just go to department stores."
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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