


Andy Warhol with The Velvet Underground, Nico's son Ari Delon, Mary Woronov, and Gerard Malanga, 1966 by Billy Name (signed print, edition no. 33/40 available)
Andy Warhol with The Velvet Underground, Nico's son Ari Delon, Mary Woronov, and Gerard Malanga, 1966
25 × 19 in. (63.5 × 48.3 cm) silkscreen print.
Edition of 40, print #33/40 available. Hand-signed and numbered by the artist. A percentage of net sales is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness.
Please note: this work is currently on loan to the Andy Warhol: My True Story exhibition at Newlands House Gallery, Petworth, West Sussex (6th June-14th September 2025) and will be available for delivery early in October 2025.
Photographer Billy Name had unmatched access to Andy Warhol’s in the 1960s, becoming The Factory’s resident photographer and a key member of its inner circle.
“Billy caught the energy of the Factory scene, but also its sense of sanctuary – a place where the freaks and outsiders could merge with the glamorous under the democratic gaze of Andy’s Super 8.” Sean O’Hagan, The Guardian
Billy Name lived in a tiny cupboard at the Factory, and undertook the now-iconic silverizing project that gave the studio its infamous Silver Factory title. Billy went about laboriously covering every inch of the building in silver foil and silver spray paint. Upon completion, Warhol gave Billy a Pentax Honeywell 35mm camera and appointed him the Factory’s resident photographer and archivist. The photographs Billy took of Warhol, the Factory, and entourage would become one of the most significant visual records ever made of any artist’s career.
Andy Warhol with The Velvet Underground, Nico's son Ari Delon, Mary Woronov, and Gerard Malanga, 1966
25 × 19 in. (63.5 × 48.3 cm) silkscreen print.
Edition of 40, print #33/40 available. Hand-signed and numbered by the artist. A percentage of net sales is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness.
Please note: this work is currently on loan to the Andy Warhol: My True Story exhibition at Newlands House Gallery, Petworth, West Sussex (6th June-14th September 2025) and will be available for delivery early in October 2025.
Photographer Billy Name had unmatched access to Andy Warhol’s in the 1960s, becoming The Factory’s resident photographer and a key member of its inner circle.
“Billy caught the energy of the Factory scene, but also its sense of sanctuary – a place where the freaks and outsiders could merge with the glamorous under the democratic gaze of Andy’s Super 8.” Sean O’Hagan, The Guardian
Billy Name lived in a tiny cupboard at the Factory, and undertook the now-iconic silverizing project that gave the studio its infamous Silver Factory title. Billy went about laboriously covering every inch of the building in silver foil and silver spray paint. Upon completion, Warhol gave Billy a Pentax Honeywell 35mm camera and appointed him the Factory’s resident photographer and archivist. The photographs Billy took of Warhol, the Factory, and entourage would become one of the most significant visual records ever made of any artist’s career.
Andy Warhol with The Velvet Underground, Nico's son Ari Delon, Mary Woronov, and Gerard Malanga, 1966
25 × 19 in. (63.5 × 48.3 cm) silkscreen print.
Edition of 40, print #33/40 available. Hand-signed and numbered by the artist. A percentage of net sales is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness.
Please note: this work is currently on loan to the Andy Warhol: My True Story exhibition at Newlands House Gallery, Petworth, West Sussex (6th June-14th September 2025) and will be available for delivery early in October 2025.
Photographer Billy Name had unmatched access to Andy Warhol’s in the 1960s, becoming The Factory’s resident photographer and a key member of its inner circle.
“Billy caught the energy of the Factory scene, but also its sense of sanctuary – a place where the freaks and outsiders could merge with the glamorous under the democratic gaze of Andy’s Super 8.” Sean O’Hagan, The Guardian
Billy Name lived in a tiny cupboard at the Factory, and undertook the now-iconic silverizing project that gave the studio its infamous Silver Factory title. Billy went about laboriously covering every inch of the building in silver foil and silver spray paint. Upon completion, Warhol gave Billy a Pentax Honeywell 35mm camera and appointed him the Factory’s resident photographer and archivist. The photographs Billy took of Warhol, the Factory, and entourage would become one of the most significant visual records ever made of any artist’s career.
Shipping of Billy Name prints
Print Matters Billy Name exhibition prints will be shipped within 7 working days of the order being placed. These prints will be shipped flat in boxes specially designed for the purpose and should not be rolled, as this risks causing damage. The exhibition prints come complete with a label for the reverse of the frame that details the artist’s name, image title, edition number, and other key details.
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