From the thirty-two canvas <em>Campbell''s Soup Cans</em> to the <em>Marilyn Diptych</em>, Andy Warhol''s silk-screen prints are the epitome of Pop Art: witty, gimmicky and unafraid of repetition. Obsessed with consumerism and the cult of celebrity, Warhol exalted the "surface of things" ¿ and yet he was a man of deep complexity. <br><br>In <em>Andy</em>, Typex captures the remarkable life of the king of Pop Art, from his working-class upbringing in Pittsburgh to the dizzying heights of his celebrity. Spanning a period that began with the "talkies" and ended with the advent of house music, it is also a memorable portrait of 20th century pop culture and the stars who defined it: from Elvis to Greta Garbo, Truman Capote to Lou Reed. <br><br>Taking in Warhol''s early career as a commercial illustrator, his relationship with the Velvet Underground and the development of his own instantly recognisable style, Typex''s <em>Andy</em> is an exhilarating portrait of a transcendent artist and a m