"This is where he got his creative juices flowing and made art that funded the lifestyle he had for the rest of his life," said listing broker Merav Shalhon of Essential New York Real Estate.
Warhol owned this property from 1960 until 1972. The Upper East Side townhouse's artist studio is, most of all, where he created some of his most famous works like the Campbell's soup can pieces, and signature portraits of Muhammad Ali, Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and more.
The 19th-century building, which dates to the 1880s, was created by Henry J. Hardenbergh, whose trophy designs like the Plaza Hotel, the Waldorf-Astoria and the Dakota helped shape New York City.
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