News
Warhol held onto the so-called "Prince Series" until his death in 1987, at which point the prints became property of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts (AWF), established as part of ...
Supreme Court to hear copyright case on Warhol prints, Prince photo BY David Mendez Nationwide UPDATED 9:00 AM ET Mar. 30, 2022 PUBLISHED 5:31 PM ET Mar. 29, 2022 PUBLISHED 5:31 PM EDT Mar. 29, 2022 ...
When Prince died in 2016, Condé Nast magazine used one of Warhol's prints based on Goldsmith's photo on the cover of its issue paying tribute to the late musician.
For decades, Andy Warhol’s silkscreen portraits of Prince were a blip in his larger oeuvre. But the Supreme Court may have single-handedly increased their value by 40 times, as collectors are ...
The foundation asserted that in Warhol's version, not only did Warhol crop the image to remove Prince's torso, but he resized the image, altered the angle of Prince's face, and changed the tones, ...
Vanity Fair commissioned Warhol to create an illustration for a 1984 article on Prince, and obtained a license from Goldsmith, paying her $400, to use the photo as an artistic reference for Warhol.
In a twist, one case before the U.S. Supreme Court this term involves Andy Warhol and 1981 photo of the musician Prince. The Supreme Court this week hears arguments in a case that is - let's all ...
The Supreme Court today heard a case today about a drawing that Andy Warhol did of Prince in 1984. Warhol died three years later. The drawing was taken from a photograph by Lynn Goldsmith. She’s suing ...
Photographer Lynn Goldsmith claims Andy Warhol infringed on her copyright in 1984 when he made a series of prints based on her portrait of Prince.
Images Andy Warhol created of Prince are at the heart of a case the Supreme Court will examine on Wednesday. Warhol used a black-and-white portrait taken by Lynn Goldsmith as a reference point.
Images Andy Warhol created of Prince are at the heart of a case the Supreme Court will examine on Wednesday. Warhol used a black-and-white portrait taken by Lynn Goldsmith as a reference point.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results