If you have no plans for the weekend, we might have an idea for you; the "BMW->ke178 - The Ultimate Driving Machine"exhibition will open this weekend and will feature some of the coolest BMW models out there. Andy Warhol's 1979 BMW M1 Art Car will be the center piece of the exhibition and next to it you will also see the BMW 3.0 CSL that won the Daytona 24 Hour race in 1976, plus tons of other road cars, motorcycles and race cars.

Andy Warhol was the first to paint the entire car himself, as previous BMW Art Car artists prepared a draft version on a scaled-down model and then moved that on the real car by assistants to the painter.

"This exhibition at the Saratoga Automotive Museum will provide visitors a great look at BMW’s long heritage and provide a sense of how the company has evolved to become the leading premium automobile and motorcycle manufacturer in the world," said Ludwig Willisch – President and CEO of BMW of North America. "It will also show just how integral motorsports has been throughout the company’s history."

Don't worry, if you don't have the time to go this weekend, the exhibition, will run until November 3, 2013.

Click past the jump to read more about Andy Warhol's 1979 BMW M1 Art Car.

Andy Warhol's 1979 BMW M1 Art Car

Andy Warhol's Art Car was based on the BMW M1 - the only real supercar developed by the company. Warhol painted the car himself with large blocks of color meant to blur together at high speed.

He used his hands for the entire process, so he obtained a pretty cool impression of motion. The Warhol M1 raced in the 1979 Le Mans with the originator of the BMW Art Car project, Herve Poulain, as one of its three drivers.