charlie: the next one is alice neel. 1965. this is extraordinary.f all the stories, this is a powerful story. dr. campbell: this is a talismanic piece. alice neel famously painted people who lived near her, people who she didn't know, she would invite them in off the street. this young man caught her i come . -- i he was going off to the vietnam war and he never came back. we don't know why. maybe you never came back from the war. -- maybe he never came back from the war. charlie: his name was james hunter? dr. campbell: yes. she signed it and presented it as a finished work. it becomes a metaphor of a life cut off. charlie: one sitting? dr. campbell: one sitting. so many of the works in the show have this, everyone has a story. it is not a show you blow through into minutes. in two minutes. every work has a story. it is very moving. charlie: this is andy warhol, 1962. do it yourself. dr. campbell: paint by numbers. in the modern area, we have some works that are, again, on this theme of rawness, unfinished. but we also go into a more conceptual are