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Andy Warhol’s *Campbell’s Soup Cans II: Scotch* distils his Pop Art project into a crisp meditation on branding, desire, and American mass culture. Executed in his signature screenprint technique, the work’s flat colour fields and mechanically repeated contours emulate commercial production while subtly revealing the hand through minor shifts in ink density and registration. By isolating an everyday grocery staple and elevating it to the status of icon, Warhol collapses distinctions between high art and consumer imagery, anticipating today’s image economy and celebrity-driven marketing. Part of the celebrated *Campbell’s Soup* series, *Scotch* remains a defining statement on postwar capitalism, reproducibility, and the aesthetics of the supermarket shelf.
Andrew "Andy" Warhol ( ; born Andrew Warhola Jr.; August 6, 1928 – February 22, 1987) was an American artist and filmmaker. Widely regarded as the most important artist of the second half of the 20th century, Warhol's work spanned various media, including painting, filmmaking, photography, publishin...
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