- Andy Warhol Cologne Cathedral | FS-II.361
- Cologne Cathedral | FS-II.362
- Cologne Cathedral | FS-II.363
- Cologne Cathedral | FS-II.364
Andy Warhol
Cologne Cathedral
Screenprint on Lenox Museum Board.
1985
39.375″ x 31.5″
Edition of 60, 15 AP, 6 PP, 15 HC, signed in pencil vertically lower right and numbered in pencil lower right. There are 80 individual TP not in portfolios signed in pencil vertically lower right and unnumbered.
Portfolio of four screenprints with diamond dust.
Printer: Rupert Jasen Smith, New York
Publisher: Hermann Wünsche, Bonn, Germany
Andy Warhol – Edition Prints – Cologne Cathedral
Sell/Buy Request Info
Andy Warhol Cologne Cathedral is a range of artworks created by artist Andy Warhol.
Andy Warhol created the “Cologne Cathedral Group,” a set of four silkscreens of the Cologne Cathedral, by demonstrating how a pop image of Gothic architecture can create new meanings in various colors.
When Andy Warhol first burst onto the artistic stage in the 1960s’, he did so by incorporating images that were firmly embedded in the American psyche. His bright and colorful paintings and serigraphs presented images that were commonplace — a soup can or coke bottle — but were transformed by his technique into artistic icons of popular culture. Warhol was most interested in image and not reality, although one could say that by casting these mass produced commercial images in his own unique style, Warhol was making a comment on the reality of living in a world that was dominated by images from the advertising and entertainment industries. Warhol’s prints are in essence images of images. They are at least once removed, and often several times removed, from reality. His famous prints of Marilyn Monroe and Jackie Kennedy, not to mention countless other celebrities, are based on photographs. As in the case with Marilyn Monroe, many of those photographs are of his subjects posing as a character, not as themselves, a subtle reminder that once someone achieves a certain celebrity status, they become further and further removed from their real selves. How many layers must one remove to finally see the real person depicted in a Warhol print?