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This undated image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pa., shows "Andy2", a piece that is thought to be made by the late pop artist, Andy Warhol, on a computer in 1985. The museum says that the artist had a contract with Commodore International to produce images on one of its Amiga home computers. The old images recently were extracted from disks by members of Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University Computer Club in collaboration with museum staff. (AP Photo/Andy Warhol, 1985, ©The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visuals Arts, Inc.)
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This undated image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pa., shows "CampbellÕs," a piece that is thought to be made by the late pop artist, Andy Warhol, on a computer in 1985. The museum says that the artist had a contract with Commodore International to produce images on one of its Amiga home computers. The old images recently were extracted from disks by members of Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University Computer Club in collaboration with museum staff. (AP Photo/Andy Warhol, 1985, ©The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visuals Arts, Inc.)
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This undated image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, Pa., shows "Venus", a piece that is thought to be made by the late pop artist, Andy Warhol, on a computer in 1985. The museum says that the artist had a contract with Commodore International to produce images on one of its Amiga home computers. The old images recently were extracted from disks by members of Pittsburgh's Carnegie Mellon University Computer Club in collaboration with museum staff. (AP Photo/Andy Warhol, 1985, ©The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visuals Arts, Inc.)
PITTSBURGH >> Cybersleuths have unearthed images that Andy Warhol apparently made on a computer in 1985.
The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh says in a release that the artist had a contract with Commodore International to produce images on one of its Amiga home computers. The old images recently were extracted from disks by members of Pittsburgh’s Carnegie Mellon University Computer Club in collaboration with museum staff.
The museum says the images vary from doodles and camera shots of a desktop to versions of Warhol’s classic images of a banana, Marilyn Monroe and a Campbell’s soup can.
Museum director Eric Shiner said Warhol “saw no limits to his art practice.”
“These computer generated images underscore his spirit of experimentation and his willingness to embrace new media — qualities which, in many ways, defined his practice from the early 1960s onwards,” Shiner said.
The museum said the idea to try to recover images from the disks came when artist Cory Arcangel learned of the Amiga work from a YouTube clip showing Warhol promoting the release of the Amiga 1000 in 1985.