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Almost 60 years after its 1964 release, Andy Warhol's iconic Pop Art interpretation of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis has been reinvented by the London-based artist for his contemporary After Warhol: Uniques collection.
Bringing the former First Lady of the United States to life, Paul used Warhol's original acetate to create a unique silkscreen artwork that has been created using the artist's exact process. Termed 'posthumous Warhols' by the late Warholian expert Rainer Crone, Paul's revolutionary art offers a unique gateway to owning a piece considered by some to be a genuine Warhol artwork.
Paul says: "The end result is exactly what you would see in a Warhol painting hanging in his Tate Modern retrospective right now."
Almost 60 years after its 1964 release, Andy Warhol's iconic Pop Art interpretation of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis has been reinvented by the London-based artist for his contemporary After Warhol: Uniques collection.
Bringing the former First Lady of the United States to life, Paul used Warhol's original acetate to create a unique silkscreen artwork that has been created using the artist's exact process. Termed 'posthumous Warhols' by the late Warholian expert Rainer Crone, Paul's revolutionary art offers a unique gateway to owning a piece considered by some to be a genuine Warhol artwork.
Paul says: "The end result is exactly what you would see in a Warhol painting hanging in his Tate Modern retrospective right now."
Researching and recreating the practices first established by Andy Warhol, London-based artist Paul has dedicated the last decade to creating After Warhol. Created using the Pop Art founder's original acetate, the artist recreates Warhol's iconic Cow series.
‘These one-off/unique colourways came about quite organically as part of following Andy Warhol’s process. He experimented with making multiple “colourways“, he talked about people getting a Warhol that would match the drapes/curtains. Making unique one-off colours felt like a natural progression of that Warholian idea.’
‘The process for making these unique colour involves hand painting the background colours. Even using the same pigments and same brand of paint that Warhol used. The end result is exactly what you would see on a Warhol painting hanging in the Tate retrospective right now.’
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