Andy Warhol — "I want everybody to think alike. I think everybody should be a machine."
I want everybody to think alike. I think everybody should be a machine.
I want everybody to think alike. I think everybody should be a machine.
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"I'd prefer to remain a mystery. I never give my background, and, anyway, I make it all up different every time I'm asked."
"Being born is like being kidnapped. And then sold into slavery. People are working every minute. The machinery is always going. Even when you sleep."
"Everybody must have a fantasy."
"But to become a famous artist you had to do something that was 'different'. And if it was 'different', then it means you took a risk, because the critics could have said that it was bad instead of goo…"
"When you work with people who misunderstand you, instead of getting transmissions, you get transmutations, and that's much more interesting in the long run."
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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