In 1967, Warhol established a print-publishing business, Factory Additions, through which he published a series of screenprint portfolios on his signature subjects. Marilyn Monroe was the first one. He used the same publicity still of the actress that he had previously used for dozens of paintings. Each image here was printed from five screens: one that carried the photographic image and four for different areas of color, sometimes printed off-register. The present 1986 offset lithograph was made for the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Denmark. It features Warhol's iconic 1967 silver Marilyn Monroe silkscreen, boldly signed by Warhol in black marker. The exhibition was held less than one year before Andy Warhol’s untimely death on February 22, 1987.
“ The more you look at the same exact thing, the more the meaning goes away, and the better and emptier you feel. „