In October the exhibition Money On The Wall: Andy Warhol opened in the Spritmuseum in Stockholm, Sweden. The Spritmuseum is home to the complete Absolut Art Collection, 850 works by 550 artists around the iconic Absolut Vodka bottle – or rather the bottle became iconic because of the artworks – created between 1985 and 2004. First one was the famous ‘black’ bottle by Warhol in 1985, the beginning of one of the most successful advertising campaigns ever.
In 2020 a second but long forgotten blue version of the Absolut bottle, also painted by Warhol in 1985, surprisingly turned up at an auction. For decades just a rumor, it was now proven to be really existing. The blue version now is also part of the Spritmuseum’s Absolut Art Collection, curated by Mia Sundberg.
The Money On The Wall show is the first time Warhol’s blue Absolut Vodka painting is shown to the public. Spritmuseum got Warhol biographer and art critic Blake Gopnik on board to curate the exhibition, with a brilliant focus on Warhol’s business art: his practice of constantly tearing down walls between commerce and fine art, throughout his career.
I am very proud that I was able to contribute to this exhibition by lending three pieces from my collection: two original ink drawings commissioned for record covers in the 1950ies (Trombone By Three on Prestige Records (1957), and Chopin:Nocturnes performed by Jan Smeterlin on the Epic label (1955)), and the mega rare cover for the NBC promotional box Voices And Events (1950). In fact, just like the blue Absolut Vodka painting, all three items have their world première at an exhibition.










Blake Gopnik didn’t stop at Warhol; in order to deeper explore the business art concept, Money on the Wall also places Warhol in a context with artists working on similar themes – from Warhol’s time to the present day: Takashi Murakami, Jens Haaning, Andrea Fraser, Carey Young, Darren Bader, Edvard Munch, the art collective MSCHF, Mason Rothschild…
MSCHF for instance is the art collective behind the Museum Of Forgeries: they bought a genuine Warhol drawing of fairies for $20.000, had it mechanically copied 999 times, and shuffled the original between the fakes. All 1000 were then sold for $250 a piece under the name ‘Possibly Real Copy of Fairies by Andy Warhol’. Three of the ‘possibly real copies’ are on view in the Spritmuseum exhibition, which means at least two fakes made it to a real Warhol exhibition. Brilliant, or what?
Another MSCHF endeavour is the Global Supply Chain Telephone Handbag; pictures and explanation below.







Money On The Wall: Andy Warhol is on view at the Spritmusuem until April 27, 2025.
Guy – thanks for the comprehensive overview of the show – you’ve just saved me a day of writing my own summary in the next monthly newsletter!
My wife and I were quite happy to have been able to see this show in person – it really did a lot to help you get a better sense of Warhol’s commercial work, which is often overshadowed by the multi-million $$ sales of his fine art items. The staff at the Spiritmuseum was also very friendly and informative (it turned out that Maria at the front desk had spent a year in Chicago, so we had stories to swap!) and we also enjoyed a fine lunch at the restaurant attached to the museum.
Sorry that we couldn’t have met in person, but it was quite nice to see parts of your (and Richard’s) collection so nicely displayed in this show.
Cheers
Mike Goldstein
AlbumCoverHallofFame.com
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thanks so much for the report…it looks like a fantastic exhibition 👏👏👏🥂
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Great review, Guy! So nice to be able to spend a few days together!
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Hi Guy,
Really nice comment, I really want to go and see the exhibition after your excellent report.
Don’t forget to stop by if you’re in the area
Johan Weckhuyzen
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