PopCult is a pop culture blog, and one of the legendary POP ART artistes was one Andy Warhol, so it was inevitable that we’d eventually feature Pittsburgh’s favorite son in this space.

Tonight, for those of you who aren’t particularly interested in the series finale of Game of Thrones, we bring you a three-hour documentary about Mr. Warhol.

Quoting from The IMDB Page:

ANDY WARHOL: THE COMPLETE PICTURE is the definitive account of the life and work of the most enigmatic and influential artist of the late twentieth century. Over 60 interviews with Warhol’s close friends, collaborators, Superstars, Factory cohorts and family, as well as distinguished philosophers, art historians and cultural commentators, constitute a documentary profile unprecedented in its depth, range and scale. The series boasts unique access to the Warhol Foundation’s rich and extensive archives, previously unseen private home-movie footage, audio-tapes as yet unheard, and extracts from Warhol’s legendary film experiments, mysteriously withdrawn by the artist over 30 years ago. Warhol’s intuitive grasp of, and influence on, the collapsing of high and low culture in the late twentieth century is reflected in the extraordinary range of participants in this series, who include ARTHUR DANTO, Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University, Blondie’s DEBBIE HARRY, Hollywood maverick DENNIS HOPPER and fellow Warhol collector LORD ARCHER. Other contributors include artists JULIAN SCHNABEL, JEFF KOONS, PETER BLAKE, KENNY SCHARF, RONNIE CUTRONE and KOMAR and MELAMID; actors CRISPIN GLOVER, JOE DALLESANDRO, UDO KIER and JARED HARRIS; filmmakers PAUL MORRISSEY and JONAS MEKAS; musicians JOHN CALE and THE DANDY WARHOLS; New York socialite NAN KEMPNER, and guru of window dressing, SIMON DOONAN. Beginning with Warhol’s death and the establishment of the Andy Warhol museum in Pittsburgh (the only museum dedicated to an American artist), it becomes immediately apparent as we sift through the vast treasure of archives that whether Warhol was sketching, painting, screen printing, photographing, filming, writing, publishing, tape recording, videotaping, or speaking on the telephone, that his entire life was his work, and that as an artist he was obsessed with documenting experience.

Originally presented as a mini-series for TV, here’s the entire thing, in one nearly three-hour block. Enjoy, and maybe have some Campbell’s soup with it!

And remember, some reviews have said that this documentary is chock full of mistakes and inaccuracies.