Also from USA Today.
THE MAN HAS ART -- BUT NO WARHOL
Paul Stanley is a man with few regrets, but he does acknowledge one involving Andy Warhol. "On many occasions, he told me to come down to the Factory and he'd do my portrait. I always thought 'maybe next week' or 'next month.' But I never did it."
Although his home is filled with paintings and frescoes, Stanley doesn't consider himself a major collector, and he doesn't own any of Warhol's work. "My house is not a museum of art," he says.
But the wish list of artists he'd love to have in his collection includes Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock, known for his technique of pouring and dripping paint onto canvas.
"People look at his work and they think they could do it, and that makes me love it even more," Stanley says. "When anyone says something looks simple, the two words I have for them are: Try it."
THE MAN HAS ART -- BUT NO WARHOL
Paul Stanley is a man with few regrets, but he does acknowledge one involving Andy Warhol. "On many occasions, he told me to come down to the Factory and he'd do my portrait. I always thought 'maybe next week' or 'next month.' But I never did it."
Although his home is filled with paintings and frescoes, Stanley doesn't consider himself a major collector, and he doesn't own any of Warhol's work. "My house is not a museum of art," he says.
But the wish list of artists he'd love to have in his collection includes Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock, known for his technique of pouring and dripping paint onto canvas.
"People look at his work and they think they could do it, and that makes me love it even more," Stanley says. "When anyone says something looks simple, the two words I have for them are: Try it."

