Mao 96 by Andy Warhol presents Mao Zedong through a striking chromatic imbalance that immediately unsettles the image. Warhol floods Mao’s face with a dense, matte red that reads less as skin tone than as a cosmetic mask, hovering between pigment and symbol. He leaves the lips pale and nearly colorless, which intensifies the effect and makes the red feel applied rather than natural. By contrast, the background recedes into a subdued, creamy beige, while the jacket holds unusually restrained, almost realistic shading. Loose black linework traces Mao’s features and collar, injecting nervous energy and resisting polish. The image feels taut and dissonant, as if Warhol has stripped propaganda of its certainty and recast it as something theatrical, unstable, and exposed.