. >> rose: the next one is alice neal. james hunter black draftee in 1965. this is-- i mean, of all the stories, this is such a powerful story. >> yeah, this is almost aitalismanic piece of the exhibition. here, alice neal famously-- she painted people who lived in her neighborhood, people she didn't know she'd invite in off the street. and this young man caught her eye. this was a first sitting. he was a draftee going off to the vietnam war, and he never came back. we don't know why. maybe he never came back from the war. and some years later, she -- >> but his name was james hunter. >> yeah, we know that. she signed it and presented it as a finished work so it becomes a metaphor of what may have been a life cut off. >> rose: one sitting. >> one sitting. >> rose: one sitting. >> yeah. >> rose: that's amazing. >> so many of the works in the show have this. un, everyone has a story. it's not a show you blow through, you know, in two minutes. every work has a story, and it's very moving. >> rose: the next is andy warhol, from 1962, "do it yourself." >> paint b