Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Smithsonian Institution describes Rachel as a "life-size, realistic figure" of a sow piggy bank. [1] The Pike Place Market Foundation calls it the "mascot" of Pike Place Market . [ 2 ] The bronze sculpture depicts a pig with a money slot on the top of its head and measures approximately 36 by 66 by 16 inches (91 cm × 168 cm × 41 cm) and ...
Coca-Cola (4), also known as Large Coca-Cola, is a pop art painting by Andy Warhol.He completed the painting in 1962 as a part of a wider collection of Coca-Cola themed paintings, including Coca-Cola (3) and Green Coca-Cola Bottles, also completed in the early to mid-1960s.
Coke bottle design in the facade of the Elmira Building. The following buildings and structures are related to The Coca-Cola Company or their bottlers.As of 2012, 900 factories and bottleries served the company and many buildings formerly used by the company have been added to heritage registers.
3 Coke Bottles was one painting from this series of works, but they also included Coca-Cola (3), Coca-Cola (4) and Green Coca-Cola Bottles. It is often confused for the better known Coca-Cola (3), despite the two paintings being entirely different. The painting contains 3 green colored Coca-Cola bottles, with the red coca-cola logo underneath. [2]
The 1991 sign was replaced in 2004 by a new Coke sign. The Coca-Cola Company and MoMA (The Museum of Modern Art) selected Brand Architecture's distinctive design from fifteen design firms from the United States. The multi-layered billboard had a complex pattern of stainless steel planes and exposed superstructure.
The Journeyman Project 2: Buried in Time is a computer game developed by Presto Studios and is the second game in the Journeyman Project series of computer adventure games. Published in 1995 by Sanctuary Woods , Buried in Time was a radical change from the original.
Warhol would state that “A Coke is a Coke, and no amount of money can get you a better Coke.”, alluding to the idea of economic and political equality. Some of his most famous works focus on mass-produced items, such as soup cans and coke bottles, products that consistently remained the same quality, no matter how much you paid for it.
Green Coca-Cola Bottles is a 1962 painting by Andy Warhol that depicts one hundred and twelve almost identical Coca-Cola bottles. Andy Warhol produced at least four notable Coca-Cola paintings in the 1960s, with Green Coca-Cola Bottles being one of them. As part of the same series, Warhol created Coca-Cola (3), among others.