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  1. Picture Colors. #fd0266. #fc045a. #393230. #fcb094. #6e5d2d. #e2c940. Directory records similar to the Andy Warhol: Marilyn Monroe. Stanley Bate: Masks. Masuo Ikeda: For Your Secret Night, A. Robert Indiana: Eight. Andy Warhol: Marilyn Monroe - art color codes.

  2. The Marilyn Diptych is a silkscreen painting by American pop artist Andy Warhol depicting Marilyn Monroe. The monumental work is one of the artist's most noted of the movie star. The painting consists of 50 images. Each image of the actress is taken from the single publicity photograph from the film Niagara (1953).

  3. Marilyn Monroe was the first one. He used the same publicity still of the actress that he had previously used for dozens of paintings. Each image here was printed from five screens: one that carried the photographic image and four for different areas of color, sometimes printed off-register.

  4. The Marilyn Monroe portfolio is a portfolio or series of ten 36×36 inch silkscreened prints on paper by the pop artist Andy Warhol, first made in 1967, all showing the same image of the 1950s film star Marilyn Monroe but all in different, mostly very bright, colors.

  5. 31 de ene. de 2023 · The Sale of the Shot Sage Blue Marilyn Monroe painting by Andy Warhol. After selling for $195 million in less than four minutes at auction in New York, Andy Warhols 1964 silk-screen Marilyn Monroe print, Shot Sage Blue Marilyn, became the most valuable work of 20th-century art ever

  6. While Gold Marilyn Monroe has an almost elegiac feel due to the isolation of the small screenprinted image of the actress against a flat gold background, Marilyn (1967) is shockingly bold, with a palette of bright yellow, acid green, and hot pink, whose graphic power is all the more pronounced because of the small size—6" x 6"—of the work ...

  7. One Hundred and Fifty Multicolored Marilyns. 1979 Acrylic and silkscreen ink on canvas. 201 x 1,055 x 6 cm. Andy Warhol announced his disengagement from the process of aesthetic creation in 1963: "I think somebody should be able to do all of my paintings for me," he told the critic Gene R. Swenson. He thus distanced himself from the mythic role ...