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In the future everybody will be world famous for fifteen minutes
Andy Warhol
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Everybody must have a fantasy
Andy Warhol
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Size: 14.00" x 14.00"
Regular: $99.96
On Sale: $54.98
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Size: 14.00" x 14.00"
Regular: $99.96
On Sale: $54.98
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Buy The Set & SAVE!
Regular: $199.92
On Sale: $98.96
This fine framed artwork has a faux canvas treatment, recreating the original canvas look. It is finished in an ultra modern 1.0" wide by 1.0" silver stainless steel colored frame.
FENG SHUI DECORATING TIP
Color Orange - To minimize disputes & legal problems in your Career, hang this artwork on the North Wall or in the North room of your home or office.
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CUSTOMER REVIEWS
I am so thrilled with the framed set of floral art that I received today! The canvas texture made the art look so real and the frame is gorgeous. It was better than I imagined! I was worried about ordering online, but not anymore. Thank you for doing such a great job...I love my framed art sets!
- Jennifer M., Worcester, Mass.
DESIGNER TIPS AND DECORATING IDEAS
How High Should I Hang Art? Art is very personal, but there is 1 rule that everyone should abide by. NEVER LOOK UP TO SEE YOUR ART! Even though there are many variations in height (so whose eye level are we talking about) simply use this calculation: Measure approximately 58" from the floor to the MIDDLE of the artwork and that is where you should hang your Art. What happens if you're hanging it above furniture (like a couch or buffet)? It should only be approximately 6" above the furniture. Let's keep in mind that in many your rooms, you are sitting. So, it's perfectly fine for your art to be lower, rather than higher up on the wall. No matter how high your ceilings are, you never want to "crane" your neck to see your art.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Andy Warhol began as a commercial illustrator in New York, doing artwork for ads and magazines in the 1940s and 1950s. Eventually he crossed from commercial work to fine art, blurring the line between the two along the way. In the early 1960s his huge and colorful silk-screen renderings of banal objects like Coke bottles and a Campbell's Soup can were hugely popular and established him as the leader of the so-called Pop Art movement. (His multi-color, multi-image portrait of Marilyn Monroe is another famous image from this era.) By the mid-1960s Warhol had become an icon of the psychedelic generation; he made strange and lengthy experimental movies, held famous gatherings in "The Factory," his Manhattan studio, and surrounded himself with a court of fellow artists and adoring fans. He also worked closely with the experimental rock group The Velvet Underground and (in 1969) founded the influential celebrity magazine Interview. Warhol's attitude was summed up in part in his statement, "In the future everyone will be world-famous for fifteen minutes."
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