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Previously unknown digital work made by pop artist Andy Warhol was resurrected from ageing floppy disks by forensic computer experts from Carnegie Mellon University, the school announced.

A dozen newly discovered images were unearthed from the 1985 computer disks by the university’s computer club. They depict common Warhol subjects including Campbell’s Soup cans, self-portraits, bananas and Marilyn Monroe as well as doodles and camera shots of a desktop.

The work adds a new appreciation for Warhol’s use of technology

Carnegie Mellon art professor Golan Levin said the work was recovered thanks in part to someone posting on You Tube a 1985 infomercial showing Warhol using an Amiga computer to create a digital portrait of singer Debbie Harry.

A Warhol fan, artist Cory Arcangel, saw the You Tube video and in 2011 began investigating whether there was more computer art from Warhol to be found.

His inquiry brought him to The Andy Warhol Museum’s archives in Pittsburgh, where he found a cache of floppy disks that remained unlabelled because the museum lacked the outdated technology needed to read them. Arcangel helped link the museum with the computer club at Carnegie Mellon in Pittsburgh, one of the top US techno­logy schools.

After some digital sleuthing, the club used a process called retro-computing to reveal the images in a matter of hours. The newly un­covered art is owned by the Andy Warhol Foundation, although it was commissioned by Commo­dore Inter­national to promote its 1985 Amiga 1000 computer.

“What’s amazing is that by looking at these images, we can see how quickly Warhol seemed to intuit the essence of what it meant to express oneself, in what then was a brand-new medium: the digital,” Arcangel said in a statement.

The work adds a new appreciation for Warhol’s use of technology, showing his interests went far be-yond the films and screen prints for which he is most famous.

Warhol died in 1987 at age 58.

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