After the success of his original 32 paintings, Warhol continued to explore the Campbell's soup motif in numerous variations. By 1982, he had created more than 100 renderings, ranging in size from intimate 20-inch canvases to monumental works nearly 6 feet tall. Some versions depicted torn or peeling labels, dented cans, or opened lids, expanding the imagery beyond the pristine commercial façade. Together with the original 32 canvases, these works are collectively known as the ''Campbell's Soup Cans
series. The earliest soup can painting seems to be Campbell's Soup Can (Tomato Rice)'' (1961), executed in ink, tempera, crayon, and oil. In 1962, Warhol refined his technique, moving from hand painting to stamps, stencils, and eventually silkscreen, using synthetic polymer paint and ink on canvas. The mechanical process introduced slight irregularities—ink buildup, seepage, or misalignment—that became part of the works' character. In many versions, Warhol simplified the can's gold medallion, replacing its detailed allegorical figures with a flat yellow disk, reinforcing the image's graphic flatness. Works featuring torn labels have often been interpreted metaphorically, suggesting impermanence beneath consumer packaging. The Museum of Modern Art, which owns the 32 original works along with ''
Campbell's Soup I (1968) and Campbell's Soup Cans II (1969) series, identifies original 32 canvases as "acrylic with metallic enamel paint on canvas, 32 panels," and the latter two as "portfolios of ten screen prints." Thus, the medium used by Warhol when painting the original series was acrylic on canvas. Some sources mistakenly describe the original set of 32 Campbell's Soup Cans
as silkscreens, contributing to ongoing confusion—so much so that when the Art Gallery of Ontario acquired Campbell's Soup I
, The Globe and Mail'' called it "the entire, iconic series." The breadth of the series, its collaborative production, and the high market value of Warhol's work led to the creation of the
Andy Warhol Art Authentication Board in 1995 to certify authenticity; it was dissolved in 2012 following costly legal disputes. The cultural and financial significance of the soup can images has also made them targets of theft: a ''Campbell's Soup Cans'' painting estimated to have been worth €35,000 (€ in ) was stolen from the
Andy Warhol Museum of Modern Art in 2015. In 2021, a
lithograph from the series was stolen from art curator Gil Traub in Manhattan.
''Big Campbell's Soup Can with Can Opener (Vegetable)'' (1962) ''Big Campbell's Soup Can with Can Opener (Vegetable)
(1962) is an early hand-painted work by Warhol and the only example of his Campbell's Soup Can
paintings to depict a can opener. Executed in early 1962, before Warhol began using silkscreen techniques, it is among the first large-scale depictions of the motif and appeared in a photograph of his studio published in Time magazine in May 1962. Reviewing the show, The New York Times'' critic Stuart Preston wrote that Warhol was "relentlessly painting one big Campbell soup can after another," calling them "big steps towards art that is socially to the point." The painting has had several notable owners. It was purchased in 1962 by collectors
Emily Hall Tremaine and Burton Tremaine, and was later acquired by
Ted Ashley, a former
Warner Bros. executive. this was in the private collection of John and Kimiko Powers, it is the largest single canvas in the ''Campbell's Soup Cans'' series. Regarded as a landmark of Pop art, the work bridges earlier precedents such as
Jasper Johns and later developments in
Minimal and
Conceptual art. Created as Warhol shifted from hand painting to mechanical processes, it employs synthetic polymer paint and silkscreen ink on canvas. His adoption of stamps, stencils, and eventually silkscreen reduced manual irregularities, leaving only mechanical variations such as ink buildup or slight misalignments. Warhol's ''200 Campbell's Soup Cans
was included in Six Painters and the Object'', a 1963 exhibition at the
Minneapolis Institute of Art featuring 35 paintings by emerging American artists associated with the then-controversial Pop art movement. In 1970, some of the colored variations, along with the original 32 ''Campbell's Soup Cans'', were part of a major retrospective at the
Pasadena Art Museum. After opening in
Pasadena, the exhibition traveled to Chicago, Eindhoven, Paris, and London, concluding at the
Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. This set is regarded as significant enough to be exhibited as a cohesive body of work. At least one entered the collection of the Museum of Modern Art prior to 2004. 19 of the 20 paintings are known to survive, and 12 were reunited in 2011 for the exhibition ''Colored Campbell's Soup Cans'' at
L&M Arts in New York City.
''Campbell's Soup I (1968) and Campbell's Soup II'' (1969) Although Warhol's silkscreening technique enabled mass production, no two prints were identical; variations in pressure, clogging, and surface texture created subtle differences. By late 1962, he was producing silkscreens rapidly, and in 1967, he formalized his print operations through
Factory Additions. In 1968 and 1969, he issued two editions of ten Campbell's soup can screen prints, each in runs of 250. The series also reflects changes in commercial design: the ''Campbell's Soup I
(1968) set reproduces the original soup can labels, while Campbell's Soup II'' (1969) features updated, more elaborate versions. In 2016, 7 prints from ''Campbell's Soup I'' were stolen from the Springfield Art Museum; the
Federal Bureau of Investigation offered a $25,000 ($ in 2025) reward for information leading to their recovery. Writing for
Artnet News, Blake Gopnik described the Springfield screen prints as comparatively modest in value, estimating them each at around $30,000 ($ in 2025). However, the
National Public Radio reported typical prices of up to $45,000 ($ in 2025), with the tomato soup version reaching as much as $100,000 ($ in 2025). The museum ultimately received a $750,000 insurance payout. An edition of the second set, ''Campbell's Soup II
is part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. The Museum of Modern Art in New York also has one of these sets. In 2013, Hot Dog Bean'' soup from this set sold for $258,046 ($ in ) in
Vienna. The unauthorized works were the result of a falling out between Warhol and some of his New York City studio employees who went to
Brussels where they produced work stamped with "Sunday B Morning" and "Add Your Own Signature Here". Some of the unauthorized productions bore the markings, "This is not by me, Andy Warhol".
Art market In 1964, the ''Campbell's Soup Cans'' were reportedly offered for $200 ($ in ) each at the Ferus Gallery, though approximately half a dozen were ultimately sold for $100 ($ in ) apiece. Warhol produced six torn-label Campbell's Soup can paintings, two of which achieved record-setting prices. In 1970, Warhol set a record auction price for a living American artist when ''Big Campbell's Soup Can with Torn Label (Vegetable Beef)'' (1962) sold for $60,000 ($ thousand in ) at
Parke-Bernet. The seller was art collector
Peter Brant, according to dealer James Mayor. Some accounts suggest the sale may have been arranged rather than fully competitive. The record was surpassed months later when Warhol's rival
Roy Lichtenstein sold
Big Painting No. 6 (1965) for $75,000 ($ in ). In 1961, Warhol painted a single ''Campbell's Soup Can'' on a 20 × 15-inch canvas and gave it to his brother Paul to celebrate the birth of Paul's son. The family eventually auctioned the work on November 13, 2002, at Christie's in New York; it is often regarded as a precursor to the later iconic series. The market for the soup cans strengthened dramatically in the 2000s. In May 2006,
Small Torn Campbell Soup Can (Pepper Pot) (1962) sold for $11,776,000 ($ million in ), setting an auction record for the series. The buyer was
Eli Broad, and the work now resides in his museum,
The Broad. In November 2010, ''Campbell's Soup Can (Tomato)'' (1962), which was first shown at the Stable Gallery, sold for $9 million ($ million in ) at Christie's. Market performance has fluctuated. In February 2016, amid a softer contemporary art market, a ''Large Campbell's Soup Can'' (1964)—previously sold in 2007 and 2008—fetched $7.4 million ($ million in ) at
Sotheby's, below expectations. Yet the following year, in May 2017, ''Big Campbell's Soup Can With Can Opener (Vegetable)'' (1962) achieved $27.5 million ($ million in ) at Christie's, reaffirming the enduring market power of Warhol's Campbell's imagery. == Collection ==