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Campbell's Soup Cans

Andy

By NJPublished 2 years ago 1 min read
Runner-Up in Critique Challenge
Warhol’s Campbell’s Soups, MOMA

Soup of the day. Andy Warhol's thirty-two cans of Cambell's soup were originally displayed in 1962. It is an artisanal simulation of mass production at its best in a consumer world. Seen as a rip-off of known objects and products. It's just soup in a can after all. Nothing else.

Art

About the Creator

NJ

A creative soul at heart. Truth, love and compassion influence my creativity in the form of writing, painting, and living life.

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Comments (6)

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  • Nessy Writer2 years ago

    Awesome little critique there!

  • Mackenzie Davis2 years ago

    Congratulations in placing! Creative choice to critique; it never would have crossed my mind! A very interesting art series to think about, actually.

  • Grz Colm2 years ago

    Congrats! A great mini critique. I didn’t read many with artworks. Terrific work! 😊

  • E.K. Daniels2 years ago

    Loved this! Glad to see a popular piece get a healthy critique. Well done!

  • Great way to put it. Well argued and of course succinct. As satisfying as a bowl of tomato soup. Congratulations on your win. I wrote an article about another pop icon "Whaam!" if you are interested. Ray

  • Kendall Defoe 2 years ago

    And he was still a genius for it (if you can get people to buy something they see every day, you must be one...) Well done!

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