Sunday B. Morning
Sunday B. Morning
Belgium, b. unknown
Belgium, b. unknown
Sunday B. Morning is an artistic enigma: a replicator of the 20th century’s most famous replicator. Once an authorized distributor of Andy Warhol prints, the company had its legality questioned after the artist had a change of heart, and its legitimacy as a producer of authentic prints has grown murky. The project began as a collaboration between Warhol and two anonymous friends in Belgium whom the artist contracted to make new editions of some of his most famous artworks—including his famed “Marilyn,” “Flowers,” and “Campbell’s Soup Cans” series—using negatives he gave them himself. Sunday B. Morning continued to make editions of Warhol’s iconic works after the split, in some ways continuing Warhol’s inquiries into image, iconography, reproduction, and ownership. Sunday B. Morning is now a well-known purveyor of prints including the aforementioned works as well as “Mao” and “Dollar” series.