£16,000-£25,000
$30,000-$50,000 Value Indicator
$28,000-$45,000 Value Indicator
¥150,000-¥230,000 Value Indicator
€19,000-€30,000 Value Indicator
$160,000-$250,000 Value Indicator
¥3,120,000-¥4,870,000 Value Indicator
$20,000-$30,000 Value Indicator
AAGR (5 years) This estimate blends recent public auction records with our own private sale data and network demand.
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Medium: Screenprint
Edition size: 250
Year: 1974
Size: H 103cm x W 70cm
Signed: Yes
Format: Signed Print
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Auction Date | Auction House | Artwork | Hammer Price | Return to Seller | Buyer Paid |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
April 2024 | Wright - United States | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print | |||
December 2023 | Millea Bros. - United States | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print | |||
October 2023 | Rago - United States | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print | |||
October 2022 | Phillips New York - United States | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print | |||
September 2022 | Los Angeles Modern Auctions - United States | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print | |||
February 2022 | Rago - United States | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print | |||
November 2020 | Uppsala Auktionskammare - Sweden | Flowers (F. & S. II.116) - Signed Print |
Flowers (F. S. II.112), part of the Flowers (Hand-Coloured) series (1974), is one of Andy Warhol’s more atypical prints. Reminiscent of 19th century Japanese woodblock prints, this print shows two delicately rendered flower buds and their stems on a small plate. Apart from the subdued yellow tones on the flower’s leaf, this image is drawn in black and white. As with many of Warhol’s prints, form, colour and composition are flattened and simplified, but what makes this print notable is its organic and gestural use of fine lines.
Warhol consciously maintains a hand-drawn quality in the Flowers (Hand-Coloured) series that alludes to the artist’s personal touch, producing a more contemplative image that transcends the ‘machine-like’ aesthetic. His earlier Flower series’ from 1964 and 1970 are unmistakably Pop in their brilliant, synthetic hues and erasure of the artist’s touch, however this later series is more illustrative in style, similar to the work of David Hockney and Alex Katz.
For the Flowers (Hand-Coloured) series, Warhol abandoned his photographic print technique to instead focus on line and composition. Using wallpaper samples and the book Interpretative Flower Designs by Mrs Raymond Rus Stolz as his source material, Warhol used an opaque projector to copy from these images and create the delicately rendered image. Every print in the series is unique in that they were each coloured by a studio assistant with Dr. Martin’s aniline watercolour dyes. Flowers (F. & S. II.116) amalgamates the hand-drawn with the mass-produced, and originality with appropriation, in his use of the screen printing technique, hand-dying and the copied image through organically drawn lines.