The 1962 "combine painting" snubbed high art by using found objects like a Coca-Cola sign and a large tarp.
She was alive when the Fisherman moved her through the doorway next to the pockmarked Coca-Cola sign.
The menu was a strip of Coca-Cola signs on the wall.
Once someone brought him a $2,500 Coca-Cola sign, and someone else later walked in with an 18th-century French table.
The company also designed the 65-ton Coca-Cola sign in Times Square.
What you remember are Coca-Cola signs next to mosques.
The task was made difficult because they could not be sure that the Coca-Cola sign was the first paint put on the brick wall.
So they used heat guns and spatulas to chip away at a section of the wall that held a modern Coca-Cola sign.
After the oldest Coca-Cola sign was exposed, the painters worked at matching the original colors.
A big red Coca-Cola sign hangs out front and several others that collectors would drool for hang on the wall behind the counter.