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Andy Warhol: One Blue Pussy, from 25 Cats Named Sam and One Blue Pussy (via Arte). via bartleby-company
Posted on March 1, 2013 via Bartleby & Company with 12 notes ()
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The Rolling Stones by David Montgomery promo shots for Sticky Fingers, London, 1971. Cover concept by Andy Warhol.
The album’s artwork emphasizes the suggestive innuendo of the Sticky Fingers title, showing a close-up of a jeans-clad male crotch; the cover of the original (vinyl) release featured a working zipper and mock belt buckle that opened to reveal cotton briefs. The vinyl release displayed the band’s name and album title along the image of the belt; behind the zipper the white briefs were seemingly rubber stamped in gold with the name of American pop artist Andy Warhol, below which read “THIS PHOTOGRAPH MAY NOT BE—ETC.”[3] While the artwork was conceived by Warhol, photography was by Billy Name and design by Craig Braun.
(via fascinationdreams)
Posted on January 22, 2013 via LET'S RUIN THE SHOW! with 1,034 notes ()
Source: ruiningtheshow
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Andy Warhol can see right through Marilyn Monroe via suicideblonde
Posted on January 8, 2013 via Suicide Blonde with 594 notes ()
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Images of Andy Warhol and the Rolling Stones during the seventies.
At the turn of the decade the band appeared on the BBC’s highly rated review of the sixties music scene Pop Go The Sixties, performing Gimme Shelter on the show, which was broadcast live on 31 December 1969. In 1970 the band’s contracts with both Allen Klein and Decca Records ended, and amid contractual disputes with Klein, they formed their own record company, Rolling Stones Records. Sticky Fingers (UK number 1; US 1), released in March 1971, the band’s first album on their own label, featured an elaborate cover design by Andy Warhol. The album contains one of their best known hits, “Brown Sugar”, and the country-influenced “Dead Flowers”. Both were recorded at Alabama’s Muscle Shoals Sound Studio during the 1969 American tour. The album continued the band’s immersion into heavily blues-influenced compositions. The album is noted for its “loose, ramshackle ambience”[82] and marked Mick Taylor’s first full release with the band.
(via fascinationdreams)
Posted on November 5, 2012 via under their thumb with 1,544 notes ()
Source: voodoolounge
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Andy Warhol. Positive and negative. Photo by Kurt Wyss from Zürich 1978, via inneroptics
Posted on July 6, 2012 via Inner Optics with 4 notes ()
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When The Clash met Andy Warhol. via aconversationoncool
Posted on June 1, 2012 via A Conversation On Cool. with 3,370 notes ()
Source: aconversationoncool
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![Happy Friday? Here’s an odd trio: Warhol, Stubing and a Polaroid. via blazenhoff (and nevver). It was the 80’s, folks, crazy bedfellows and always at Aaron Spelling’s house.
The Love Boat
Andy Warhol [Himself] and Gavin McLeod [Captain Merrill Stubing], 1985](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lz3l3rglvG1qz6f9yo1_500.jpg)
Happy Friday? Here’s an odd trio: Warhol, Stubing and a Polaroid. via blazenhoff (and nevver). It was the 80’s, folks, crazy bedfellows and always at Aaron Spelling’s house.
Andy Warhol [Himself] and Gavin McLeod [Captain Merrill Stubing], 1985
Posted on April 13, 2012 via this isn't happiness. with 1,076 notes ()
Source: toutceciestmagnifique.com
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“Skulls”, acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas (1976) by Andy Warhol from alaintruong.com via 2headedsnake
Posted on March 6, 2012 via 2headedsnake with 294 notes ()
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Here’s another amazing photo of Warhol this one by Jean-Paul Goude: Andy Warhol + Paloma Picasso via inneroptics
Posted on February 7, 2012 via Inner Optics with 18 notes ()
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Andy Warhol by Marie Cosindas, New York City, 1966
Posted on January 25, 2012 via simple dreams... with 338 notes ()
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Andy Warhol at Gristede’s supermarket, New York (1962) (via The Failsafe Gift Guide - Andy Warhol ‘Giant’ Size) via pjmix
(via tweedarms)
Posted on January 15, 2012 via PJ with 4,433 notes ()
Source: uk.phaidon.com







