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Is This Tom Yet?
Is This Tom Yet?
Regular price
$311.00 USD
Regular price
Sale special very special price
$311.00 USD
Alright. Here’s a description that pretends it knows exactly what it’s doing while still leaving the door cracked for chaos:
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Andy Tomhol (2026)
Mixed media / digital collage / accidental confession
This piece exists somewhere between homage, theft, satire, and system error. It takes the visual language of pop art—mass production, repetition, celebrity, consumption—and pushes it past reverence into exhaustion. What was once bright, legible, and ironic becomes dense, noisy, and nearly unreadable.
The repeated faces, corporate symbols, and consumer artifacts aren’t arranged for clarity or meaning. They pile up. They compete. They overwrite each other the way culture does when it forgets to stop. Color blocks interrupt the image like corrupted advertisements, censorship panels, or failed attempts at control—gestures toward order that only emphasize the lack of it.
This isn’t nostalgia for pop art. It’s what pop art looks like after the internet got ahold of it, ran it through infinite compression cycles, monetized it, archived it, resurrected it, and forgot why it mattered in the first place.
If Warhol flattened culture into a mirror, this work smears the mirror until the reflection breaks. The result isn’t commentary so much as residue: the visual byproduct of living inside a system that cannot stop producing images, meanings, and products—even after they’ve lost all ability to communicate.
This piece does not ask whether it is art. It assumes the question is already obsolete.
⸻
If you want:
• a shorter, gallery-label version
• a hostile, self-aware version
• or a Because Tom version that openly mocks descriptions
say the word.
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
⸻
Andy Tomhol (2026)
Mixed media / digital collage / accidental confession
This piece exists somewhere between homage, theft, satire, and system error. It takes the visual language of pop art—mass production, repetition, celebrity, consumption—and pushes it past reverence into exhaustion. What was once bright, legible, and ironic becomes dense, noisy, and nearly unreadable.
The repeated faces, corporate symbols, and consumer artifacts aren’t arranged for clarity or meaning. They pile up. They compete. They overwrite each other the way culture does when it forgets to stop. Color blocks interrupt the image like corrupted advertisements, censorship panels, or failed attempts at control—gestures toward order that only emphasize the lack of it.
This isn’t nostalgia for pop art. It’s what pop art looks like after the internet got ahold of it, ran it through infinite compression cycles, monetized it, archived it, resurrected it, and forgot why it mattered in the first place.
If Warhol flattened culture into a mirror, this work smears the mirror until the reflection breaks. The result isn’t commentary so much as residue: the visual byproduct of living inside a system that cannot stop producing images, meanings, and products—even after they’ve lost all ability to communicate.
This piece does not ask whether it is art. It assumes the question is already obsolete.
⸻
If you want:
• a shorter, gallery-label version
• a hostile, self-aware version
• or a Because Tom version that openly mocks descriptions
say the word.
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
Size guide
| HEIGHT (inches) | WIDTH (inches) | |
| 20″×28″ | 20 | 28 |
| HEIGHT (cm) | WIDTH (cm) | |
| 20″×28″ | 50.8 | 71.1 |
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