Andy Warhol American, 1928-1987
Campbell's Soup II, Hot Dog Bean (F. & S. II.59), 1969
Screenprint on paper
89 x 58 cm
35 1/25 x 22 83/100 in.
35 1/25 x 22 83/100 in.
Andy Warhol’s Hot Dog Bean is part of his 1969 Campbell’s Soup II portfolio, a continuation of the artist’s iconic exploration of consumer culture and mass production. By presenting a...
Andy Warhol’s Hot Dog Bean is part of his 1969 Campbell’s Soup II portfolio, a continuation of the artist’s iconic exploration of consumer culture and mass production. By presenting a Campbell’s soup can labeled "Hot Dog Bean"—a real but obscure flavor—Warhol both satirizes and celebrates the uniformity of American commercial goods.
Rendered in bold red and white with flat, clean lines, the screenprint mimics the exact look of supermarket packaging. Warhol’s choice to elevate such an ordinary object into the realm of fine art reflects his fascination with branding, repetition, and consumer identity in postwar America.
The humor and oddity of the flavor “Hot Dog Bean” add a layer of irony to the work, emphasizing Warhol’s playful yet critical view of advertising and American tastes. Like the rest of the Campbell’s Soup series, this print turns the familiar into the iconic—challenging the boundaries between art and everyday life.
Rendered in bold red and white with flat, clean lines, the screenprint mimics the exact look of supermarket packaging. Warhol’s choice to elevate such an ordinary object into the realm of fine art reflects his fascination with branding, repetition, and consumer identity in postwar America.
The humor and oddity of the flavor “Hot Dog Bean” add a layer of irony to the work, emphasizing Warhol’s playful yet critical view of advertising and American tastes. Like the rest of the Campbell’s Soup series, this print turns the familiar into the iconic—challenging the boundaries between art and everyday life.
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