Artworks
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Patrick Connan Cornetto Trilogy The Worlds End Lithograph Print by Patrick Connan
Cornetto Trilogy-The World's End Lithograph Print Limited Edition Artwork on GF Smith 250gsm Absolute Naturalis Matt Paper by Patrick Connan, an urban graffiti pop street artist. Lithograph print on GF Smith 250gsm Absolute Naturalis Matt paper with archival inks. Edition of 20 A2 (420 mm x 594 mm/ 16.5 x 23.4 inches) Signed / Numbered & Stamped
$103.00
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Saber Coronavirus Quarantine Slap-Up Label Sticker Original Tag Art by Saber
Coronavirus Quarantine Multi Tagged Original Slap-Up Label Marker Painting/Drawing Art on Warning Label by Tru Graffiti Legend Saber Urban Street Artist. 2020 Signed Marker Original Coronavirus Quarantine Yellow Biohazard Slap Up Graffiti Art Tag 7x5 Multi Tagged on High Visibility Virus Covid-19 Warning Label Red, Purple & Silver Marker. Confronting a Global Crisis through Street Pop Art The 'Coronavirus Quarantine' multi-tagged original slap-up label marker painting/drawing by the urban street artist Saber captures the zeitgeist of an era dominated by the pandemic. This 2020 signed marker original is more than a piece of graffiti artwork; it is a historical document that encapsulates a moment when the world grappled with the unprecedented challenge of COVID-19. Saber, known for his influential role in the graffiti art scene, takes a high-visibility yellow biohazard slap-up label, a symbol now ubiquitously associated with the virus, and transforms it into a canvas. The dimensions of the work, 7x5 inches, might seem modest, but the impact of the art could be better. Through his use of vibrant and chaotic tags that overlay the stark warning of 'Coronavirus Quarantine,' Saber disrupts the alarming message of the label, inviting contemplation on the nature of the pandemic that extends beyond fear and caution. The piece is a profound commentary on global affairs during the COVID-19 crisis. The graffiti artist's tags subverted the choice to use a warning label, a helpful object designed to communicate danger and command obedience. The tags, often considered an act of defiance in public spaces, here challenge the narrative of the pandemic by bringing an individualistic and human touch to the impersonal and clinical warning label. Impact of Saber's Art in the Context of Street Pop Art In the context of street pop art, Saber's 'Coronavirus Quarantine' piece stands out as a poignant reflection of the times. Street art has always had the unique ability to engage with its audience directly and urgently. In this instance, the art serves as a visual expression of the collective angst, confusion, and resilience experienced during the quarantine periods. Saber's artwork, juxtaposing the form of formal, almost anarchic graffiti tags, speaks to the unchecked nature of the public's response to the pandemic—order and disorder, compliance and rebellion. 2020 will be remembered for its seismic shifts in global health, economies, and societies. In this climate, street pop art and graffiti artwork like Saber's serve as markers of resistance and reminders of human endurance. The biohazard slap-up label, once a mere functional sign, is recontextualized as a piece of art that provokes, questions, and endures, much like the human spirit during the trials of the pandemic. Saber, the American artist behind this impactful work, has once again demonstrated why he is regarded as a legend in the graffiti world. His ability to take the pulse of society and translate it into art that is both provocative and reflective ensures that his work remains relevant and resonant, not just within the street art community but also among those who encounter his art in the very public spaces that the coronavirus pandemic has so markedly changed.
$70.00
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Dabs Myla Cosmic Cat Black Art Toy by Dabs Myla x Beyond The Streets
Cosmic Cat- Black Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Sculpture Collectible Artwork by Pop Modern Artist Dabs Myla x Beyond The Streets. 2022 Limited Edition of 150 Artwork Size 7x12 New In Box Cosmic Cat (Black), 2022 Limited Edition 12" Vinyl Toy 12 x 7 x 5 in (30.5 x 17.8 x 12.7 cm) Figure 13.2 x 9.5 in (33.5 x 24.1 cm) Cylindrical Box Edition of 150 Cosmic Cat Black Art Toy Print is a fascinating piece of work from Dabs Myla, a dynamic duo known for their distinctive contribution to the realms of pop art, street art, and graffiti. Initially hailing from Melbourne, Australia, this power couple has made a name for themselves by blending elements of fantasy, color, and charm to create a style that's distinctly their own. Their creation, the Cosmic Cat Black Art Toy Print, marries both their love for cartoonish designs and their keen sense for adding a vibrant touch of color to the world. It's a dazzling testament to their belief that art should be fun, and their dedication to spreading positivity through their work. This print showcases a cat character, distinguished by its bright Black color, set against a backdrop of cosmic themes. It incorporates playful imagery with a degree of complexity, which is a clear hallmark of their work. Notably, Dabs Myla's style of art evokes a sense of nostalgia, harking back to the golden era of cartoons, while also integrating a modern, street-art influence. The Cosmic Cat Black Art Toy Print demonstrates this intricate interplay perfectly, proving a shining example of their unique style. This print, with its distinctive Black cat character, is an imaginative journey into a universe of their creation, combining influences from pop and graffiti art to make a piece that is engaging, cheerful, and visually intriguing. Dabs Myla's work, including the Cosmic Cat Black Art Toy Print, is indicative of the growing popularity and acceptance of street and graffiti art in the broader art world. Their innovative art toy print contributes significantly to the landscape of pop culture art, setting new trends, and inspiring countless artists globally. This piece is more than just a creation; it's an embodiment of the duo's passion, humor, and an invitation to viewers to see the world through a colorful and whimsical lens.
$360.00
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Dabs Myla Cosmic Cat Blue Art Toy by Dabs Myla x Beyond The Streets
Cosmic Cat- Blue Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Sculpture Collectible Artwork by Pop Modern Artist Dabs Myla x Beyond The Streets. 2022 Limited Edition of 150 Artwork Size 7x12 New In Box Cosmic Cat (Blue), 2022 Limited Edition 12" Vinyl Toy 12 x 7 x 5 in (30.5 x 17.8 x 12.7 cm) Figure 13.2 x 9.5 in (33.5 x 24.1 cm) Cylindrical Box Edition of 150 3rd color-way of the Cosmic Cat vinyl toy from DABSMYLA, featuring one of their iconic and most recognizable characters! Cosmic Cat Blue Art Toy Print is a fascinating piece of work from Dabs Myla, a dynamic duo known for their distinctive contribution to the realms of pop art, street art, and graffiti. Initially hailing from Melbourne, Australia, this power couple has made a name for themselves by blending elements of fantasy, color, and charm to create a style that's distinctly their own. Their creation, the Cosmic Cat Blue Art Toy Print, marries both their love for cartoonish designs and their keen sense for adding a vibrant touch of color to the world. It's a dazzling testament to their belief that art should be fun, and their dedication to spreading positivity through their work. This print showcases a cat character, distinguished by its bright blue color, set against a backdrop of cosmic themes. It incorporates playful imagery with a degree of complexity, which is a clear hallmark of their work. Notably, Dabs Myla's style of art evokes a sense of nostalgia, harking back to the golden era of cartoons, while also integrating a modern, street-art influence. The Cosmic Cat Blue Art Toy Print demonstrates this intricate interplay perfectly, proving a shining example of their unique style. This print, with its distinctive blue cat character, is an imaginative journey into a universe of their creation, combining influences from pop and graffiti art to make a piece that is engaging, cheerful, and visually intriguing. Dabs Myla's work, including the Cosmic Cat Blue Art Toy Print, is indicative of the growing popularity and acceptance of street and graffiti art in the broader art world. Their innovative art toy print contributes significantly to the landscape of pop culture art, setting new trends, and inspiring countless artists globally. This piece is more than just a creation; it's an embodiment of the duo's passion, humor, and an invitation to viewers to see the world through a colorful and whimsical lens.
$360.00
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Dabs Myla Cosmic Cat Red Art Toy by Dabs Myla x Beyond The Streets
Cosmic Cat- Red Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Sculpture Collectible Artwork by Pop Modern Artist Dabs Myla x Beyond The Streets. 2022 Limited Edition of 150 Artwork Size 7x12 New In Box Cosmic Cat (Red), 2022 Limited Edition 12" Vinyl Toy 12 x 7 x 5 in (30.5 x 17.8 x 12.7 cm) Figure 13.2 x 9.5 in (33.5 x 24.1 cm) Cylindrical Box Edition of 150 Cosmic Cat Red Art Toy Print is a fascinating piece of work from Dabs Myla, a dynamic duo known for their distinctive contribution to the realms of pop art, street art, and graffiti. Initially hailing from Melbourne, Australia, this power couple has made a name for themselves by blending elements of fantasy, color, and charm to create a style that's distinctly their own. Their creation, the Cosmic Cat Red Art Toy Print, marries both their love for cartoonish designs and their keen sense for adding a vibrant touch of color to the world. It's a dazzling testament to their belief that art should be fun, and their dedication to spreading positivity through their work. This print showcases a cat character, distinguished by its bright Red color, set against a backdrop of cosmic themes. It incorporates playful imagery with a degree of complexity, which is a clear hallmark of their work. Notably, Dabs Myla's style of art evokes a sense of nostalgia, harking back to the golden era of cartoons, while also integrating a modern, street-art influence. The Cosmic Cat Red Art Toy Print demonstrates this intricate interplay perfectly, proving a shining example of their unique style. This print, with its distinctive Red cat character, is an imaginative journey into a universe of their creation, combining influences from pop and graffiti art to make a piece that is engaging, cheerful, and visually intriguing. Dabs Myla's work, including the Cosmic Cat Red Art Toy Print, is indicative of the growing popularity and acceptance of street and graffiti art in the broader art world. Their innovative art toy print contributes significantly to the landscape of pop culture art, setting new trends, and inspiring countless artists globally. This piece is more than just a creation; it's an embodiment of the duo's passion, humor, and an invitation to viewers to see the world through a colorful and whimsical lens.
$360.00
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Jason Abraham Smith Cosmic Eyes Silkscreen Print by Jason Abraham Smith
Cosmic Eyes Silkscreen Print by Jason Abraham Smith Hand-Pulled on Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Screenprint Artwork. 2013 Signed & Numbered on Back Limited Edition of 40 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print Cosmic Eyes Silkscreen Print by Jason Abraham Smith Cosmic Eyes is a limited edition silkscreen print created by Jason Abraham Smith in 2013. This highly detailed hand-pulled artwork, measuring 18x24 inches, is signed and numbered on the back, with only 40 prints produced. The piece exemplifies the artist’s signature style, merging elements of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork with intricate linework, surrealist horror, and an otherworldly aesthetic. The organic yet mechanical forms within the composition evoke a dreamlike fusion of science fiction, mythology, and street-inspired chaos, making it a standout example of print-based contemporary art. Visual Complexity and Symbolism The composition of Cosmic Eyes is dense and highly structured, featuring a hybrid of monstrous organic forms and intricate mechanical details. The dominant imagery presents an almost deity-like cosmic entity with piercing eyes, radiating energy in all directions. Tentacle-like appendages twist and weave throughout the scene, intertwined with technological elements, skeletal figures, and surreal textures. The symmetry of the artwork creates a hypnotic effect, drawing the viewer into a seemingly infinite pattern of repeating motifs. The use of detailed stippling and fine cross-hatching adds depth and texture, reminiscent of both traditional etching techniques and the raw aesthetics of graffiti-style illustration. The color palette, dominated by muted greens, browns, and bone-like whites, enhances the eerie and otherworldly atmosphere, reinforcing the theme of cosmic horror and transcendental vision. Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Influence Jason Abraham Smith’s work is deeply connected to the visual language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. His bold, intricate linework reflects the precision of mural-based street art, while his surreal themes and chaotic compositions are reminiscent of underground comic book aesthetics and lowbrow art movements. The layered complexity of Cosmic Eyes echoes the detailed layering techniques found in wheatpaste posters and large-scale graffiti murals. His fusion of psychedelic horror and mechanical precision captures the raw, energetic feel of urban art, making this print a piece that could just as easily exist on a city wall as in a fine art print collection. The aggressive textures and fluid movement within the piece give it an almost animated quality, reinforcing its place within contemporary print-based street art. Collectibility and Cultural Impact As a signed and numbered edition of only 40, Cosmic Eyes is a highly sought-after print among collectors of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The meticulous craftsmanship behind the hand-pulled silkscreen process ensures that each print carries subtle variations, making every copy unique. The connection to horror, mythology, and futuristic themes expands its appeal beyond traditional street art enthusiasts, attracting fans of surrealist and fantasy-driven visual art. Jason Abraham Smith’s ability to merge printmaking traditions with the raw energy of urban-inspired artwork makes this piece a defining example of contemporary silkscreen-based Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The scarcity of the edition, combined with the immersive nature of the composition, ensures that Cosmic Eyes remains a valued and influential piece within the growing world of independent screenprint artwork.
$194.00
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Madsaki Cosmic Overdose_P Offset Lithograph Print by Madsaki
Happiness Overdose Azul Mariano_P Offset Lithograph Print by Madsaki Print on Wove Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Hand-Pulled Street Pop Artwork Graffiti. 2020 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 100 Offset Lithograph Artwork Print Size 19.75x19.75 Smiley Face With Bloody Nose in Blue. Kaikai Kiki Co. Ltd, Tokyo. Unconventional Aesthetics of Madsaki's Artwork Madsaki's artwork, characterized by its distinctive use of color and form, critiques modern society's obsession with happiness and the often ironic underpinnings of this pursuit. The "Happiness Overdose Azul Mariano_P" print showcases a smiley face—a universally recognized symbol of joy—juxtaposed with a bloody nose, suggesting an overdose of happiness to the point of harm. This striking imagery, rendered in bold blue on fine art paper, invites viewers to question the true nature of joy and the cost of its excess. The resurgence of pop art in the contemporary art scene is epitomized by the creative convergence of street art and graffiti, with artists like Madsaki at the forefront. "Happiness Overdose Azul Mariano_P," a limited edition offset lithograph print by Madsaki, exemplifies this trend, blending the rebellious spirit of street art with the vibrant aesthetics of pop art. Madsaki's artwork, characterized by its distinctive use of color and form, critiques modern society's obsession with happiness and the often ironic underpinnings of this pursuit. The "Happiness Overdose Azul Mariano_P" print showcases a smiley face—a universally recognized symbol of joy—juxtaposed with a bloody nose, suggesting an overdose of happiness to the point of harm. This striking imagery, rendered in bold blue on fine art paper, invites viewers to question the true nature of joy and the cost of its excess. The Cultural Significance of Offset Lithograph Prints Offset lithography, a common technique for fine art reproduction, allows artists like Madsaki to reach a wider audience by creating multiple copies of original works. This print's size of 19.75x19.75 inches is substantial yet accessible, fitting the urban environments that often inspire street pop art. Hand-pulling each print ensures that every piece retains a touch of the artist's hand despite being part of a limited edition series. The choice of woven fine art paper as the medium further signifies a blend of street art's immediacy and fine art's enduring quality. In the context of street pop culture, limited edition artworks such as "Happiness Overdose Azul Mariano_P" reflect the exclusivity and collectibility that street art has gained in the art market. The limited edition of 100 pieces, each signed and numbered by Madsaki, speaks to the artist's personalized connection with his work and collectors. It represents a shift from the transient nature of traditional graffiti to a more permanent, revered form of artistic expression. Integration of Street Art into Mainstream Art Galleries Madsaki's collaboration with Kaikai Kiki Co. Ltd, Tokyo, a company known for its role in promoting contemporary artists, underscores the increasing integration of street pop art into mainstream art galleries and the broader art world. This partnership illustrates the potential for street-inspired artworks to be celebrated alongside more traditional acceptable art forms, signaling a shift in cultural perceptions and the breaking down of barriers between high art and popular culture. The impact of "Happiness Overdose Azul Mariano_P" extends beyond its visual composition; it encapsulates the evolution of street art into a form that is both a critical commentary on society and a coveted acceptable art commodity. Through his work, Madsaki challenges viewers to reassess their understanding of happiness, consumerism, and the role of art in modern culture. His street pop art & graffiti artwork continue to resonate with audiences around the globe, bridging the gap between underground art movements and the polished white walls of galleries.
$2,188.00
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Vexta Cosmic Owl Blotter Paper Archival Print by Vexta
Cosmic Owl Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Vexta pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.
$352.00
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Bunnie Reiss Cosmic Vacation Blotter Paper Archival Print by Bunnie Reiss
Cosmic Vacation Blotter Paper Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print Art on Perforated Blotter Paper by Bunnie Reiss pop culture LSD artwork. Archival Pigment Print on Perforated Blotter Paper Size: 7.5 x 7.5 Inches Release: April 19, 2021 Limited blotter editions are hand-perforated by Zane Kesey & may vary slightly from the example shown.
$352.00
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Sam Chivers Cosmica Giclee Print by Sam Chivers
Cosmica Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Sam Chivers. 24x24 Giclée print on Hahnemuhle fine art paper. Edition of 100
$218.00
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Takashi Murakami TM/KK Cosmos Offset Lithograph Print by Takashi Murakami TM/KK
Cosmos Offset Lithograph Print by Takashi Murakami TM/KK Hand-Pulled Print on Custom Framed Satin Wove Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Graffiti Street Pop Artwork. 2000 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 300 Artwork Size 23.5x23.5 Framed 32x32 Takashi Murakami (b. 1962) Cosmos, 2000 Offset lithograph in colors on smooth wove paper 23-3/8 x 23-3/8 inches (59.4 x 59.4 cm) (sheet) Ed. 125/300 Signed and numbered in ink lower right Published by Kaikai Kiki Co. Ltd., Tokyo Print Grade: 10/10 Matted and framed under acrylic. No apparent condition issues. Not examined out of frame. Framed Dimensions 32 X 32 Inches The "Cosmos" offset lithograph print by Takashi Murakami, created in collaboration with Kaikai Kiki in 2001, is a fine example of the Japanese artist's unique and influential work. Murakami is known for his signature "Superflat" style, which is characterized by a blend of Japanese pop culture, traditional art, and Ms Flower flowers.. In the "Cosmos" print, Murakami explores the concept of the universe, with vibrant colors, bold lines, and intricate patterns. The artwork is populated by his iconic Ms FLowerand motifs, such as smiling flowers and vines, which are deeply rooted in Japanese manga, anime, and the otaku subculture. As an offset lithograph print, the piece is created using a printing technique that involves transferring an inked image from a plate to a rubber blanket and then onto the final printing surface, usually paper. This process allows for high-quality reproductions of the original artwork, making it more accessible to a wider audience. The "Cosmos" print is a sought-after piece by collectors and fans of Takashi Murakami's work. It showcases the artist's incredible ability to merge traditional and contemporary elements, creating a visually striking representation of the universe that is uniquely his own.
$4,555.00
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Robert Wilson IV Cosplay for the Cause Silkscreen Print by Robert Wilson IV
Cosplay for the Cause Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Robert Wilson IV. Limited Edition of 110 Cosplay for the Cause approached us to help produce their fund-raiser incentive poster for Wizard World Austin last month, and we placed them with artist extraordinaire Robert Wilson IV! This 4-color hand-printed silkscreen measures 18x24 inches.
$159.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Cost of Oil AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Cost of Oil AP Artist Proof Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY Hand-Pulled 2-Color on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork Obey Pop Culture Artist. AP Artist Proof 2008 Signed & Marked AP Limited Edition Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print. The "Cost of Oil" silkscreen print by Shepard Fairey is a provocative piece that cuts to the heart of street pop art and graffiti artwork's capacity to confront and question socio-political issues. Released in 2008 as an artist proof (AP), this limited edition artwork is a visual exploration of the themes of energy consumption, environmental impact, and the geopolitical ramifications implicit in the pursuit of oil. Signed and marked as an AP by Fairey, the piece measures 18x24 inches and is printed on cream speckletone fine art paper. Known for his intelligent and critical approach to cultural commentary, Fairey's "Cost of Oil" embodies the essence of his street pop art practice. The artwork is anchored by the bold, declarative question, "What is the cost of oil?" which resonates against the backdrop of a commanding visual narrative. The image features a solitary figure, clad in a shirt emblazoned with "USA," filling up a Hummer's gas tank—a potent symbol of American consumption and the military-industrial complex. The radiant sunburst behind the figure and the dripping blood-red bottom underscores the dichotomy of light and darkness in the discourse around freedom and its costs. This 2-color hand-pulled print is a quintessential example of Fairey's work, aligning itself with the 'OBEY' campaign's goal to stimulate discussion and reflect on the pervasive propaganda in public spaces. The 'OBEY' motif has always sought to challenge observers to question the mechanisms and messages in their environment, and "Cost of Oil" extends this challenge to the global issue of oil dependency and its vast implications. As a piece of street pop art, the "Cost of Oil" is a catalyst for dialogue, pushing the boundaries of what art can communicate and how it can influence public thought. It's a stark reminder of the power of visual art as a means of activism and advocacy and of Fairey's enduring role in using his art to spotlight crucial issues. The print remains a relevant and stirring piece within the oeuvre of Fairey's work and the larger conversation about energy, environmentalism, and the actual price of consumption.
$1,116.00
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Adam Lister Couch Portrait Simpsons Archival Print by Adam Lister
Couch Portrait Simpsons Archival Print by Adam Lister Limited Edition on 300gsm Hot Press Matte Fine Art Paper Pop Graffiti Street Art Artist Modern Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Print Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 10x8 Archival Pigment Fine Art Simpsons Cartoon Family of Marge Lisa Bart Homer Maggie The Dog & Cat in Glitch Style Sitting ON Their Couch Like In The Famous Show Title Screen Gag. The realm of contemporary art has seen the confluence of various genres, with pop art, street art, and graffiti art taking the limelight in recent decades. Among the many artworks that epitomize this confluence is the "Couch Portrait Simpsons Archival Print" by renowned artist Adam Lister. This limited edition artwork is an intriguing amalgamation of modern techniques and iconic imagery, presented on a premium 300gsm Hot Press Matte Fine Art Paper. Lister's piece is not just another rendition of a globally recognized image; it's a deep dive into the nuances of popular culture and the reimagining of familiar visuals through a fresh lens. Drawing inspiration from the iconic title screen gag of "The Simpsons," where the cartoon family comprising Marge, Lisa, Bart, Homer, Maggie, along with their beloved pets, settle onto their living room couch in myriad comedic scenarios, Lister recreates the scene in a distinctive 'glitch' style. This stylistic choice can be viewed as a reflection of the digital age, a comment on the interruptions and "glitches" in our modern life, and perhaps a nod to the imperfections that make us human. What sets this artwork apart further is its exclusivity. Created in 2023, each print is meticulously signed and numbered by Adam Lister, emphasizing its limited edition status with only 50 copies in existence. Measuring at a comfortable 10x8 size, the archival pigment fine art ensures longevity and pristine visual quality. For aficionados of modern art that intersects with pop culture, this print is not merely a collectible but a testament to the ever-evolving narrative of art in the age of media saturation. The "Couch Portrait Simpsons Archival Print" serves as a reminder of the power of reinterpretation, pushing boundaries in both form and content.
$288.00
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Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta Could We Be Love Silkscreen Print by Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta
Love Above All Silkscreen Print by Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta Hand-Pulled on Deckled Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Screenprint Artwork. 2024 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 79 Limited Edition Artwork Size 30x36 Silkscreen Print of Reggae Musician Bob Marley. Capturing the Rhythms of Reggae in Silkscreen The resonance of reggae music, with its rich cultural history and messages of love and unity, has found a place in the world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork through the artistic vision of Thierry Guetta, known widely as Mr. Brainwash. His "Love Above All" silkscreen print series includes a hand-pulled piece on deckled fine art paper that celebrates the iconic reggae musician Bob Marley. This legend continues to inspire beyond the realm of music into visual art. The 2024 release, a limited edition of 79, embodies the spirit of Marley in a 30x36-inch silkscreen print that merges the visual and auditory, capturing the essence of reggae in a symphony of color and texture. Thierry Guetta's Artistic Homage to Bob Marley Thierry Guetta, hailing from France and making waves in the United States, has become a stalwart in the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork movement. His work often reflects a profound respect for cultural figures who have influenced society meaningfully. The "Love Above All" print featuring Bob Marley is an artistic accolade, presenting the musician in a thought-provoking, respectful, and transformative stance. Each print is not merely a representation but a conversation between the artist and the subject, between the viewer and the viewed, translating Marley's ethos into a visual form that speaks of his lasting impact on the world. In creating this print, Mr. Brainwash has employed his signature style, which often includes vibrant hues splashed with a deliberate spontaneity akin to how Marley's music flows with natural rhythm and poignant lyrics. The hand-pulled silkscreen technique employed by Guetta ensures that each piece of this limited series bears the individuality and imperfections that are the hallmarks of human creativity. The hand-deckled edges of the fine art paper further the uniqueness of each print, reinforcing that, like humans, no two pieces are exactly alike. Reggae's Influence on Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork Reggae music's powerful influence stretches beyond its Jamaican roots and into the global art community, influencing genres like Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork with themes of resistance, social justice, and love. Mr. Brainwash's silkscreen print is a testament to this influence, harnessing the power of visual art to celebrate and perpetuate the cultural significance of Bob Marley's legacy. In the intricate layers of the print, viewers can sense the rhythm and the call for unity and positivity that are synonymous with Marley's music. Moreover, the artwork becomes a beacon within the street art community, showcasing how the walls that once divided musical expression from visual art are now channels of communication and celebration. It also emphasizes the enduring relevance of Marley's messages and how they resonate within the urban art scene. Mr. Brainwash's decision to encapsulate Marley's image within a silkscreen print, a medium traditionally associated with pop art, demonstrates a conscious blending of artistic disciplines and cultural narratives. Legacy and Continuity in Modern Art Forms The legacy of figures like Bob Marley in modern art forms, especially in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, is pivotal in maintaining cultural continuity. Mr. Brainwash's "Love Above All" silkscreen print of Marley is a vibrant reminder of the musician's enduring influence. It stands as a cultural bridge, connecting the heart of reggae with the pulse of street art, allowing a new generation to appreciate Marley's contribution to music and social change. Signed and numbered by Guetta, each print becomes a part of this bridge, a collector's piece that carries the weight of history and the freshness of contemporary art. The limited nature of the edition – only 79 in existence – adds to the desirability of the print, making it a coveted piece for those who appreciate the intersections of music, history, and art. In crafting this homage to Bob Marley, Thierry Guetta, or Mr. Brainwash, has created a visual anthem that celebrates love, life, and freedom – themes that are as central to street art as they were to Marley's music. It is a celebration not just of a musician's life but of the powerful ways art can capture and immortalize the essence of a cultural icon. Through this print, Guetta ensures that Marley's melodies and messages continue to inspire and resonate within the visual tapestry of our lives.
$4,376.00
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Ron English- POPaganda Count Calorie Cereal Killers Silkscreen Skateboard Print by Ron English- POPaganda
Count Calorie- Cereal Killers Limited Edition Silkscreen Skateboard deck art by street pop culture artist Ron English- POPaganda. Comes with deck tape.
$204.00
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Faile Couture Silkscreen Print by Faile
Couture Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on 290gsm Moab Cotton Rag Paper by Artists Faile, Urban Pop Art Legends. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 300 Size 26x24 Signed, stamped, and embossed in the studio, Couture is an edition of 300. The print captures all the detail and painted texture right down to the drips. It's a luscious, vibrant archival pigment print on heavyweight matte art paper. Couture Print 26 x 24 inches Edition of 300 Archival Pigment Ink on Entrada 290gsm Cotton Rag Signed, Stamped, and Embossed 2022
$4,203.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Bleue Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Bleue Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Bleue Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Juane Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Juane Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Juane Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Mauve Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Mauve Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Mauve Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Orange Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Orange Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Orange Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19 Orange: Consumerism, Fear, and Satire in Street Pop Art Denial’s COVID No. 19 Orange exemplifies the collision of public crisis and luxury branding through the lens of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Created in 2021 during the height of global pandemic anxiety, this 18 x 24 inch archival pigment print was produced on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper in a limited edition of 19. Each piece is hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on the reverse, reinforcing its exclusivity. At the center of the composition is a reimagined Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, transformed into a hand sanitizer labeled COVID No. 19. Set against a bright orange background, the image invites immediate visual engagement while delivering sharp cultural critique. The bottle’s glassy elegance, chrome pump top, and minimalist white label echo the design cues of high-end fashion advertisements. Yet the label’s altered wording—replacing perfume with sanitizer, Paris with pandemic—twists the luxurious into the absurd. The reference to Chanel speaks to aspirations of sophistication and wealth, but Denial weaponizes that symbolism to comment on the commodification of fear. In this world, even a deadly virus is repackaged as a designer product. The hand sanitizer becomes a fashion accessory, fetishized through design while ignoring the broader human cost beneath its surface. Graffiti Logic Meets Capitalist Irony Denial, a Canadian street artist known for appropriating advertising language and luxury branding, uses graphic clarity and humor as a tool for subversion. His work often draws from corporate visual codes—clean typography, product rendering, billboard color schemes—but repurposes them with anti-capitalist intent. In COVID No. 19 Orange, the weapon of critique is the illusion of desirability. The orange backdrop evokes urgency and alertness, much like a hazard sign or emergency broadcast screen, while also standing in contrast to the cool minimalism of the bottle. The effect is both playful and jarring. This kind of satire aligns with graffiti’s traditional role as anti-establishment communication. While the piece itself is produced with fine art materials and gallery-grade printing methods, its message functions as cultural graffiti—tagging corporate aesthetics with disruptive truths. The slickness of the image mimics the very systems it critiques, blurring the line between participation and protest. Viewers are pulled into the illusion of glamour before recognizing its underlying emptiness. Street Pop Art as Pandemic-Era Social Commentary The use of the term COVID No. 19 instead of No. 5 cleverly mimics both pharmaceutical naming conventions and fashion industry branding. This linguistic mirroring is central to the piece’s impact, reinforcing how marketing language infiltrates even the most tragic aspects of public life. The pandemic is not just a health crisis—it’s rebranded, resold, and reimagined through consumer lenses. The art object, in this case, doubles as a time capsule for an era defined by both panic and product. COVID No. 19 Orange encapsulates the essence of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork by leveraging familiar cultural symbols to confront uncomfortable realities. Denial does not paint the virus as a biological enemy but as a commodified spectacle. The artist’s reinterpretation of Chanel’s perfume bottle is more than parody—it is a declaration that even catastrophe can be co-opted into a luxury good. The work serves as both a critique of consumer culture and a mirror to the audience that consumes it, asking not just what we’re buying, but what’s being sold
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Rose Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Rose Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Rose Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Rouge Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Rouge Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Rouge Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Sarcelle Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Sarcelle Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Sarcelle Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Verte Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Verte Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Verte Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Nate Duval Cowboy Armadillo Hummingbird Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval
Cowboy Armadillo Hummingbird Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval on Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2010 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 25 Artwork Size 24x15.25
$67.00
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Vandul Cowboy Killers Marlboro Cigarette Size 12 Shoe Sneaker by Vandul
Pair Cowboy Killers Marlboro Cigarette Size 12 Shoe Sneaker Custom Box by Vandul Limited Edition Rare Art Object Clothing Artwork Collectible. 2023 Limited Edition Vandul Shoe Size 12 Custom Marlboro Cigarette Pack Inspired New In Box Never Worn. Packaging Box Like New. Vandul's Cowboy Killers: A Bold Statement in Streetwear Shoes The 2023 limited edition Cowboy Killers Marlboro Cigarette Size 12 Shoe Sneaker by Vandul represents a provocative fusion of streetwear culture and pop art provocation. This collectible, crafted with a design inspired by the iconic Marlboro cigarette pack, encapsulates a blend of provocative street style and consumerist critique, arriving new in a meticulously designed box that underscores the artist's attention to detail and commitment to the concept. Vandul, a name that resonates within the street pop art and graffiti artwork community, utilizes the canvas of footwear to explore themes of commercialism, addiction, and the allure of branding. These rare art object sneakers comment on the pervasive nature of advertising and how brand imagery infiltrates and influences public consciousness. The shoes, never worn and preserved in their original packaging, are as much a statement piece as a fashion item, inviting reflection on the intersections between identity, consumer culture, and artistic expression. Vandul's work challenges the wearer and observer to consider the implications of branding, even as it appropriates and recontextualizes a familiar logo into something new and artistically significant. In essence, Vandul's Cowboy Killers sneakers are a testament to the power of street pop art to make a statement, transform the ordinary into the extraordinary, and provoke thought through the medium of everyday objects. These sneakers are not just a piece of clothing but a conversation starter, a piece of wearable art that carries the weight of cultural critique and the legacy of street art innovation.
$333.00
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Zane Thomas Cowgirls #1 Silkscreen by Zane Thomas
Cowgirls #1 Limited Edition 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Zane Thomas Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 8.5x11 The Artistic Expression of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls, a limited edition 3-color hand-pulled silkscreen print by Zane Thomas, embodies the bold and dynamic energy of street pop art and graffiti artwork. Created in 2013 as part of a signed and numbered edition of 50, this piece merges pop culture references with the raw edge of urban art. Measuring 8.5 x 11 inches, the composition captures the spirit of rebellion, independence, and strength that cowgirl imagery has long symbolized in American culture. Through the use of bold lines, stylized figures, and a carefully selected color palette, Thomas injects new life into this traditional motif while maintaining his distinctive graffiti-inspired aesthetic. The Symbolism of the Cowgirl in Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork The cowgirl has been a powerful symbol of resilience, freedom, and individuality, making her a fitting subject for street pop art and graffiti artwork. In this print, Zane Thomas embraces the iconography of the American West while reinterpreting it through a contemporary lens. By incorporating elements of bold color blocking, exaggerated linework, and an expressive composition, the piece bridges the classic Western aesthetic with modern urban visual culture. The cowgirl figure resonates with themes of defiance and independence, aligning with the rebellious spirit of street art. This visual reinterpretation challenges traditional narratives while celebrating the strength and confidence embodied by the cowgirl. The Craftsmanship Behind the Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Silkscreen printing is a process that allows for vibrant, layered compositions, making it an ideal medium for an artwork like Cowgirls. The three-color design showcases Thomas’s ability to create depth and movement within a limited palette. Hand-pulled printing methods bring an element of craftsmanship to each piece, ensuring that no two prints in the edition are exactly alike. The precision required in layering different ink colors enhances the artwork's visual impact, emphasizing sharp contrasts and bold outlines. This attention to technique highlights Thomas’s expertise in blending traditional printmaking methods with the raw energy of graffiti-style art. The Cultural Impact of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls stands as a powerful statement within street pop art and graffiti artwork, reflecting both historical imagery and contemporary artistic movements. By incorporating Western themes into an urban art format, Zane Thomas creates a visual dialogue between past and present, tradition and rebellion. This piece challenges conventional perceptions of the cowgirl by placing her within a modern, graffiti-inspired aesthetic, reinforcing her role as a cultural icon. As part of a limited-edition series, it holds significance for collectors who appreciate the fusion of classic themes with the dynamic, ever-evolving language of street art.
$134.00
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Zane Thomas Cowgirls #2 Silkscreen by Zane Thomas
Cowgirls #2 Limited Edition 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Zane Thomas Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 8.5x11 The Artistic Expression of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls, a limited edition 3-color hand-pulled silkscreen print by Zane Thomas, embodies the bold and dynamic energy of street pop art and graffiti artwork. Created in 2013 as part of a signed and numbered edition of 50, this piece merges pop culture references with the raw edge of urban art. Measuring 8.5 x 11 inches, the composition captures the spirit of rebellion, independence, and strength that cowgirl imagery has long symbolized in American culture. Through the use of bold lines, stylized figures, and a carefully selected color palette, Thomas injects new life into this traditional motif while maintaining his distinctive graffiti-inspired aesthetic. The Symbolism of the Cowgirl in Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork The cowgirl has been a powerful symbol of resilience, freedom, and individuality, making her a fitting subject for street pop art and graffiti artwork. In this print, Zane Thomas embraces the iconography of the American West while reinterpreting it through a contemporary lens. By incorporating elements of bold color blocking, exaggerated linework, and an expressive composition, the piece bridges the classic Western aesthetic with modern urban visual culture. The cowgirl figure resonates with themes of defiance and independence, aligning with the rebellious spirit of street art. This visual reinterpretation challenges traditional narratives while celebrating the strength and confidence embodied by the cowgirl. The Craftsmanship Behind the Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Silkscreen printing is a process that allows for vibrant, layered compositions, making it an ideal medium for an artwork like Cowgirls. The three-color design showcases Thomas’s ability to create depth and movement within a limited palette. Hand-pulled printing methods bring an element of craftsmanship to each piece, ensuring that no two prints in the edition are exactly alike. The precision required in layering different ink colors enhances the artwork's visual impact, emphasizing sharp contrasts and bold outlines. This attention to technique highlights Thomas’s expertise in blending traditional printmaking methods with the raw energy of graffiti-style art. The Cultural Impact of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls stands as a powerful statement within street pop art and graffiti artwork, reflecting both historical imagery and contemporary artistic movements. By incorporating Western themes into an urban art format, Zane Thomas creates a visual dialogue between past and present, tradition and rebellion. This piece challenges conventional perceptions of the cowgirl by placing her within a modern, graffiti-inspired aesthetic, reinforcing her role as a cultural icon. As part of a limited-edition series, it holds significance for collectors who appreciate the fusion of classic themes with the dynamic, ever-evolving language of street art.
$134.00
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Zane Thomas Cowgirls #3 Silkscreen by Zane Thomas
Cowgirls #3 Limited Edition 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Zane Thomas Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 8.5x11 The Artistic Expression of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls, a limited edition 3-color hand-pulled silkscreen print by Zane Thomas, embodies the bold and dynamic energy of street pop art and graffiti artwork. Created in 2013 as part of a signed and numbered edition of 50, this piece merges pop culture references with the raw edge of urban art. Measuring 8.5 x 11 inches, the composition captures the spirit of rebellion, independence, and strength that cowgirl imagery has long symbolized in American culture. Through the use of bold lines, stylized figures, and a carefully selected color palette, Thomas injects new life into this traditional motif while maintaining his distinctive graffiti-inspired aesthetic. The Symbolism of the Cowgirl in Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork The cowgirl has been a powerful symbol of resilience, freedom, and individuality, making her a fitting subject for street pop art and graffiti artwork. In this print, Zane Thomas embraces the iconography of the American West while reinterpreting it through a contemporary lens. By incorporating elements of bold color blocking, exaggerated linework, and an expressive composition, the piece bridges the classic Western aesthetic with modern urban visual culture. The cowgirl figure resonates with themes of defiance and independence, aligning with the rebellious spirit of street art. This visual reinterpretation challenges traditional narratives while celebrating the strength and confidence embodied by the cowgirl. The Craftsmanship Behind the Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Silkscreen printing is a process that allows for vibrant, layered compositions, making it an ideal medium for an artwork like Cowgirls. The three-color design showcases Thomas’s ability to create depth and movement within a limited palette. Hand-pulled printing methods bring an element of craftsmanship to each piece, ensuring that no two prints in the edition are exactly alike. The precision required in layering different ink colors enhances the artwork's visual impact, emphasizing sharp contrasts and bold outlines. This attention to technique highlights Thomas’s expertise in blending traditional printmaking methods with the raw energy of graffiti-style art. The Cultural Impact of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls stands as a powerful statement within street pop art and graffiti artwork, reflecting both historical imagery and contemporary artistic movements. By incorporating Western themes into an urban art format, Zane Thomas creates a visual dialogue between past and present, tradition and rebellion. This piece challenges conventional perceptions of the cowgirl by placing her within a modern, graffiti-inspired aesthetic, reinforcing her role as a cultural icon. As part of a limited-edition series, it holds significance for collectors who appreciate the fusion of classic themes with the dynamic, ever-evolving language of street art.
$134.00
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Zane Thomas Cowgirls #4 Silkscreen by Zane Thomas
Cowgirls #4 Limited Edition 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Zane Thomas Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 8.5x11 The Artistic Expression of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls, a limited edition 3-color hand-pulled silkscreen print by Zane Thomas, embodies the bold and dynamic energy of street pop art and graffiti artwork. Created in 2013 as part of a signed and numbered edition of 50, this piece merges pop culture references with the raw edge of urban art. Measuring 8.5 x 11 inches, the composition captures the spirit of rebellion, independence, and strength that cowgirl imagery has long symbolized in American culture. Through the use of bold lines, stylized figures, and a carefully selected color palette, Thomas injects new life into this traditional motif while maintaining his distinctive graffiti-inspired aesthetic. The Symbolism of the Cowgirl in Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork The cowgirl has been a powerful symbol of resilience, freedom, and individuality, making her a fitting subject for street pop art and graffiti artwork. In this print, Zane Thomas embraces the iconography of the American West while reinterpreting it through a contemporary lens. By incorporating elements of bold color blocking, exaggerated linework, and an expressive composition, the piece bridges the classic Western aesthetic with modern urban visual culture. The cowgirl figure resonates with themes of defiance and independence, aligning with the rebellious spirit of street art. This visual reinterpretation challenges traditional narratives while celebrating the strength and confidence embodied by the cowgirl. The Craftsmanship Behind the Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Silkscreen printing is a process that allows for vibrant, layered compositions, making it an ideal medium for an artwork like Cowgirls. The three-color design showcases Thomas’s ability to create depth and movement within a limited palette. Hand-pulled printing methods bring an element of craftsmanship to each piece, ensuring that no two prints in the edition are exactly alike. The precision required in layering different ink colors enhances the artwork's visual impact, emphasizing sharp contrasts and bold outlines. This attention to technique highlights Thomas’s expertise in blending traditional printmaking methods with the raw energy of graffiti-style art. The Cultural Impact of Cowgirls by Zane Thomas Cowgirls stands as a powerful statement within street pop art and graffiti artwork, reflecting both historical imagery and contemporary artistic movements. By incorporating Western themes into an urban art format, Zane Thomas creates a visual dialogue between past and present, tradition and rebellion. This piece challenges conventional perceptions of the cowgirl by placing her within a modern, graffiti-inspired aesthetic, reinforcing her role as a cultural icon. As part of a limited-edition series, it holds significance for collectors who appreciate the fusion of classic themes with the dynamic, ever-evolving language of street art.
$103.00
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Jason Levesque Coyote Giclee Print by Jason Levesque
Coyote Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Jason Levesque. 2014 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 12x18
$134.00
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Add Fuel Cradle AP Silkscreen Print by Add Fuel
Cradle AP Silkscreen Print by Add Fuel Hand-Pulled 7-Color on 320gsm Astropack Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork. AP Artist Proof 2023 Signed & Marked AP Limited Edition Artwork Size 19.69x19.69 Silkscreen Print of Stylized Tile Like Medical Caduceus Symbols, Hearts & Steam Punk Machine Like Elements. "As part of the creation, install and public reveal of CRADLE, I created this limited edition screen print based on the visual aesthetic of the tile installation. This edition is (was?) not available for sale." -Add Fuel. The Intersection of Traditional Imagery and Modern Techniques in Add Fuel's Cradle AP Silkscreen Print Add Fuel's "Cradle AP" is an exemplary piece of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, a silkscreen print that intricately weaves historical symbolism with contemporary design. This hand-pulled, 7-color print on 320gsm Astropack fine art paper stands out in its limited edition form, with each piece marked as an artist proof (AP) and signed by the artist in 2023. With artwork dimensions of 19.69x19.69 inches, "Cradle AP" is a testament to the meticulous craft of silkscreen printing and the innovative spirit of modern street-inspired artwork. The print's visual lexicon is a tapestry of stylized tile-like patterns, medical caduceus symbols, hearts, and steampunk machine-like elements. This blend of iconography is a hallmark of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, where artists often employ familiar motifs unexpectedly to challenge the viewer's perceptions and invite more profound reflection on the intersection of past and present, tradition and innovation. Add Fuel's Artistic Language: A Blend of Heritage and Rebellion "Cradle AP" speaks a complex visual language that is both a homage to and a reinterpretation of historical art forms. The use of tile-like patterns references the ancient practice of ceramic tiling, a craft steeped in cultural heritage and often seen in historical buildings. Yet, Add Fuel infuses the work with contemporary relevance and pop culture connectivity by incorporating modern symbols such as the caduceus – associated with medicine and healing – and hearts. The inclusion of steampunk elements furthers this blend of times and traditions, introducing a subculture that embodies a fusion of Victorian-era industrial steam-powered machinery with futuristic concepts. This anachronistic style is particularly resonant in Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, where artists frequently mix eras and ideas to create something entirely new and thought-provoking. Materiality and Method: The Significance of Silkscreen Printing in Street Pop Art The silkscreen printing method used in "Cradle AP" is significant within the context of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. Silkscreen, or serigraphy, is a printing technique embraced by various art movements throughout the 20th century, most notably pop art. It allows for the vibrant and precise application of color, evident in the rich textures and layers in this print. By choosing Astropack fine art paper, Add Fuel ensures that the print has a high-quality finish and longevity, mirroring street art's lasting impact on urban landscapes. This choice of medium reflects a reverence for the durability of street art. At the same time, the limited edition nature of the work introduces an element of exclusivity akin to the unique location-specific nature of graffiti. Collectibility and Cultural Resonance of Cradle AP The limited edition "Cradle AP" holds a special place in collectible Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. As an artist's proof, it serves as a testament to the creative process, offering insight into the artist's work before the final edition is run. Street art collectors are often drawn to the authenticity and rawness of artist proofs, finding value in the visible iterations and refinements that lead to the final piece. Add Fuel's signature on each print, which serves as a direct connection between the artist and the collector, a significant element in street art where the artist's identity and personal touch carry substantial weight. This aspect of "Cradle AP" is a nod to the origins of graffiti, where the artist's tag is both a signature and a claim to space. The Evolution of Street Art: Add Fuel's Contribution Add Fuel's "Cradle AP" represents a point in the evolution of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork where artists explore new methods and mediums while staying true to the ethos of street art. With its intricate design and layered meanings, this piece exemplifies the dynamic nature of street-inspired art, pushing beyond the confines of urban spaces and into the realm of fine art collections. The work is a celebration of the power of street art to transform spaces and ideas, merge the historical with the contemporary, and create dialogues that cross cultural and temporal boundaries. "Cradle AP" is not just a print but a narrative woven in color and form that continues the ever-evolving story of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork.
$1,564.00
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Crash- John Matos CRASH 100% & 400% Be@rbrick Art Toy by Crash- John Matos
CRASH 100% & 400% BE@RBRICK Limited Edition Medicom Vinyl Artwork Toy Collectable Art Figure. 2020 Crash x Bearbrick Crossover in Box
$503.00
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Crash- John Matos Crash Archival Archival Print by Crash- John Matos
Crash Archival Print Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on Cotton Fine Art Paper by Artist Crash- John Matos, Street Pop Art Graffiti Legend. 2021 Signed Limited Edition Of 50 Each Print os on 17 Inch By 22 Inch Archival Cotton Paper. From An Edition of 50, These Prints Are Extremely Limited. All Prints Come Signed And Numbered By The Artist. Crash's Pioneering Journey in Street Pop Art The world of street pop art and graffiti has been dramatically influenced by the vibrant works of John Matos, better known as Crash. Emerging from the 70s and 80s graffiti boom, Crash has solidified his place as a legend within the art community. His works, characterized by bright colors, bold lines, and a dynamic sense of movement, bridge the gap between the streets' raw energy and fine art galleries' sophistication. In 2021, Crash released a series of archival pigment fine art limited edition prints on cotton paper, further cementing his legacy in the art world. Crash's journey in the art world began on the subway cars of New York City, where he translated his Bronx upbringing into explosive works of visual art. His graffiti was not simply an act of rebellion but a statement of existence, a declaration of a vibrant subculture. As he transitioned from subway walls to canvas, Crash brought the immediacy and authenticity of street art into a more enduring form. His 2021 limited edition prints culminate this transition, allowing collectors to own a piece of street art history. The archival prints by Crash are not just reproductions; they are artworks in their own right. Measuring 17 by 22 inches and printed on archival cotton paper, these prints exhibit the artist's signature style with the same intensity and energy as his original large-scale works. The limited edition of 50 prints ensures exclusivity, making each piece a treasured artifact of Crash's artistic prowess. The fact that Crash signed and numbered each print adds a personal touch that connects the collector directly to the artist's hand. Crash's Contribution to the Popularity of Street Art Crash has been pivotal in recognizing graffiti as a legitimate art form. By introducing the raw visual language of the streets to the fine art world, he has opened the door for other street artists to be appreciated by a broader audience. His archival prints bridge the transient nature of street art and the permanence desired by fine art collectors. They encapsulate the essence of street pop art: accessible yet sophisticated, popular yet personal. Crash's 2021 series of archival prints represents a significant moment in the artist's career. They reflect his evolution from a street artist to a celebrated figure in the global art scene. Each print is a testament to street art's power to convey complex emotions and narratives through simple yet impactful visuals. For enthusiasts and collectors, owning one of these prints is not just an investment in art but an investment in an era's cultural heritage. In street art and pop graffiti, Crash continues to inspire and influence aspiring artists and seasoned collectors. His limited edition archival prints are not merely canvases of color and form; they are storied pieces that carry the weight of the artist's history, the evolution of street art, and the ongoing dialogue between urban expression and fine art appreciation. Crash invites all to experience the unique energy and spirit that only street art can offer through these prints.
$450.00
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DGK Crash Test Kalis 8.38 Skateboard Art Deck by DGK
Crash Test Kalis- 8.38 Deck Limited Edition Silkscreen Skateboard deck art by street pop culture artist DGK. 7-ply Maple with Assorted Stain Veneers / Full Graphic Bottom / Top Screen Graphics / Josh Kalis Professional Endorsed Skateboard / 8.38" Width x 32.15" Length / 14.5" Wheelbase
$89.00
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Brandalism & Brandalised Crayon Shooter LA Gold Polystone Sculpture by Brandalised
Crayon Shooter- LA Gold Limited Run Polystone Statue Sculpture Artwork by graffiti street artist modern pop artist Brandalised. 10" Tall Mighty Jaxx Polystone Statue Artist Brandalised 2021 Limited Edition The sad expression on his face underlines the seeming end of his innocence. Why is he wielding a machine gun when he should be doodling with crayons instead? Don't miss your chance to own this incredible art piece. All purchases come with a box of gold ammo crayons.
$533.00
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Tim Oliveira Crazy About Elvis Blue Silkscreen Print by Tim Oliveira
Crazy About Elvis- Blue 1-Color Edition Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on 100% Cotton Rag Rives BFK Paper by Tim Oliveira Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. Tribute to Music Legend Elvis Presley in US Air Force Military Outfit. Limited edition 1 color silkscreen print, signed and numbered in pencil. Printed on heavy 100% Cotton Rag Rives BFK paper, 250 gsm weight.
$256.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY Hand-Pulled on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork Obey Pop Culture Artist. 2021 Signed by Shepard Fairey- OBEY & Numbered Limited Edition of 150 Artwork Size 18x24 Sedation in Bloom Silkscreen Print Series. "I originally worked on this poppy pattern art as part of my collaboration with artist Gordon Cheung. In our piece, we addressed the tragic murder of Vincent Chin and the historical use of anti-Asian imagery and symbols in Western culture. The poppy is a beautiful flower with many symbolic interpretations, including peace, death, sleep, and sedation. I often weave floral and decorative patterns into my art to draw viewers in and make challenging concepts more digestible. However, decorative appeal can sedate people and distract them from more important social issues. Whether in entertainment, alcohol, drugs, or conspicuous consumption, I think sedation is a major cause of social and political complacency and ignorance. These Sedation In Bloom prints serve the dual purpose of a decorative escape and a reminder to stay awake and aware!" -Shepard Fairey- OBEY. Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom: Reflecting on Society Through Street Pop Art The Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom silkscreen print by Shepard Fairey, an iconic figure in the street pop art and graffiti artwork realm, stands as a thought-provoking piece that goes beyond mere aesthetic pleasure. Fairey, born as Frank Shepard Fairey on February 15, 1970, in Charleston, South Carolina, USA, has carved a niche for himself with works that often reflect a blend of political activism and artistry. This particular artwork, a part of the Sedation in Bloom series, is no exception. Hand-pulled on cream speckletone fine art paper, the Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom is a limited edition artwork, with each piece signed and numbered by Fairey himself. The size of the artwork, 18x24 inches, offers a substantial canvas for the expression of intricate and symbolic imagery. Limited to an edition of 150, these prints capture the exclusive nature of Fairey's work. The Symbolism of Poppies in Fairey's Visual Language The motif of the poppy in this series carries rich symbolic interpretations, ranging from peace to death, and from sleep to sedation. Fairey's choice of the poppy is deliberate and multifaceted; it is not only about creating a pleasing visual but also about the underlying message it conveys. The interplay of the serene blue on cream reflects a tranquil aesthetic, yet the poppies' association with sedation challenges the viewer to look deeper into the societal implications of the artwork. Fairey’s work is a commentary on the complacency and ignorance that he perceives as pervasive in society. The seductive nature of entertainment, alcohol, drugs, and material excess serves as a means to sedate the masses, distracting them from social and political engagement. Through the Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom print, Fairey juxtaposes the allure of the poppies with a call to consciousness, urging the viewer to stay awake and aware amid societal distractions. Artistic Collaboration and Social Commentary The inception of this poppy pattern art arose from Fairey's collaboration with Gordon Cheung, where the duo addressed the harrowing murder of Vincent Chin and the use of anti-Asian motifs in Western culture. By incorporating these themes into his street pop art, Fairey elevates the conversation from street-level discourse to a wider socio-political dialogue. The prints serve as a decorative escape, yet they double as a potent reminder of the importance of staying alert to the world's inequities and injustices. Shepard Fairey's Cream & Blue Sedation in Bloom is a striking example of how street pop art can be a powerful medium for social critique. As viewers engage with the harmonious color scheme and the delicate floral patterns, they are also confronted with the societal urge to remain vigilant. Through this series, Fairey reiterates his belief in the capacity of art to ignite change, to unsettle the comfortable, and to provoke a reawakening of social consciousness. The artwork symbolizes the dual role of art in modern culture: as an object of beauty and as a catalyst for awareness and action.
$676.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Cream & Gold Sedation in Bloom Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Cream & Gold Sedation in Bloom Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY Hand-Pulled on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork Obey Pop Culture Artist. 2021 Signed by Shepard Fairey- OBEY & Numbered Limited Edition of 150 Artwork Size 18x24 Sedation in Bloom Silkscreen Print Series. "I originally worked on this poppy pattern art as part of my collaboration with artist Gordon Cheung. In our piece, we addressed the tragic murder of Vincent Chin and the historical use of anti-Asian imagery and symbols in Western culture. The poppy is a beautiful flower with many symbolic interpretations, including peace, death, sleep, and sedation. I often weave floral and decorative patterns into my art to draw viewers in and make challenging concepts more digestible. However, decorative appeal can sedate people and distract them from more important social issues. Whether in entertainment, alcohol, drugs, or conspicuous consumption, I think sedation is a major cause of social and political complacency and ignorance. These Sedation In Bloom prints serve the dual purpose of a decorative escape and a reminder to stay awake and aware!" -Shepard Fairey- OBEY. The Lustrous Intersection of Street Pop Art and Activism In the pantheon of contemporary street pop art, Shepard Fairey's Cream & Gold Sedation in Bloom silkscreen print emerges as a piece that is as visually arresting as it is conceptually profound. American artist Frank Shepard Fairey, born on February 15, 1970, in Charleston, South Carolina, stands as a towering figure in this art movement, melding his graphic design expertise with a keen sense of political engagement. The artwork in discussion is among the limited edition Sedation in Bloom series, distinctive for its hand-pulled quality on cream speckle tone fine art paper. Symbolic Resonance in Fairey's Silkscreen Series Shepard Fairey's work often harnesses symbols' power to communicate complex social narratives. The Cream & Gold Sedation in Bloom is no different, with its canvas of 18x24 inches richly adorned with poppies in a striking gold hue against a cream background. This color choice is not merely aesthetic; gold conveys a sense of value and rarity, juxtaposed with the notion of sedation, prompts a deeper contemplation on what society deems precious versus what it uses to escape reality. Each of the 150 pieces in this series carries the unique signature of Shepard Fairey, assuring collectors of its authenticity and the artist's direct involvement. The theme of sedation, reflected in the poppy imagery, is a metaphor for how society becomes anesthetized to pressing social and political issues. Creative Collaboration and Social Critique Through Art The genesis of the poppy pattern art sprang from Fairey's collaboration with British-Chinese artist Gordon Cheung. Their collective efforts sought to comment on the tragic murder of Vincent Chin and confront the enduring use of anti-Asian imagery in Western culture. This backdrop illuminates the Sedation in Bloom prints as more than just decorative art; they are a conversation piece, challenging the viewer to wake up to the undercurrents of cultural complacency and xenophobia that still pulse beneath the surface of contemporary society. The Cream & Gold Sedation in Bloom thus represents a potent dualism inherent in street pop art and graffiti artwork – a vehicle for beauty and a tool for awareness. Shepard Fairey's work stands as an emblem of street art's potential to function as a clarion call for social vigilance, beckoning the public to a state of heightened awareness amidst a cultural landscape often too willing to lull them into passivity with its gilded distractions. Through this print series, Fairey reminds us that the actual gold is found in the collective awakening and the pursuit of truth in the face of societal sedation.
$676.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Creativity, Equity, Justice Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Creativity, Equity, Justice Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY Hand-Pulled on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork Obey Pop Culture Artist. 2019 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 450 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print "This print is a portrait of Anjel Newmann, Director of Programs and Youth Director of AS220 – a non-profit community arts organization based in downtown Providence with whom I’ve worked since the ’90s. AS220 is important to me because they have cultivated a creative community that continues to have a profoundly transformative impact on the city. I’m inspired by Anjel’s dedication to this organization, where she’s been a member since she was 13 years old, learning from a diverse set of communities and facilitating access to opportunities for young people across the city of Providence. Thank you Anjel and AS220 for all that you do for the people of Rhode Island!" -Shepard Fairey- OBEY In the vibrant intersection where art meets activism, Shepard Fairey’s silkscreen print stands as a testament to the power of creative expression as a tool for social change. Released in 2019, this limited edition piece, signed and numbered with a run of 450, encapsulates Fairey’s longstanding commitment to community engagement through art. The 18x24 artwork, hand-pulled on Cream Speckletone fine art paper, is not only a visual treat but a beacon of inspiration, embodying the themes of creativity, equity, and justice. At the heart of this print is a portrait of Anjel Newmann, a figure who represents the enduring impact of AS220, a non-profit community arts organization in Providence, Rhode Island. Newmann's involvement with AS220 began at the tender age of 13, and her journey to becoming the Director of Programs and Youth Director showcases the nurturing power of such institutions in cultivating artistic talent and leadership among the youth. Fairey, having collaborated with AS220 since the 1990s, celebrates not only the individual journey of Newmann but also the broader ethos of the organization. AS220’s pivotal role in fostering an inclusive arts community and providing a platform for marginalized voices is central to Fairey's narrative. The artwork itself is a visual confluence of Fairey's signature style with poignant messaging. Words like "Creativity," "Equity," and "Justice" are prominently featured, aligning with the larger message that Fairey perpetuates through his work—art as a mechanism for societal upliftment and personal liberation. His use of bold, contrasting colors and geometric patterns draws the eye, compelling the viewer to contemplate the interconnectedness of the artistic elements with the profound themes presented. Fairey’s choice of Anjel Newmann as the subject speaks volumes about the role models that inspire his work. By highlighting Newmann's dedication to AS220, Fairey not only honors her and the organization but also emphasizes the importance of creative communities in driving positive social change. This print transcends its aesthetic appeal, standing as a symbol of hope and a call to action, urging viewers to rise above challenges and contribute to the collective journey towards a just society. It is a celebration of Fairey’s enduring relationship with AS220 and his unwavering belief in art as a catalyst for progress.
$662.00
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Naoto Hattori Creator Giclee Print by Naoto Hattori
Creator Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Surreal Print on 100% Cotton Rag Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Naoto Hattori.
$226.00
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Anthony Clarkson Creature Comforts Giclee by Anthony Clarkson
Creature Comforts Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Museo Portfolio Rag Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Anthony Clarkson. Edition of 25 14x14 inches Fine art print on Museo Portfolio Rag Paper Hand signed and numbered by the artist
$159.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Credit Limit Bank of Ugh-Merica Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Credit Limit- Bank of Ugh-Merica Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Legend Street Art and Modern Pop Culture Artist Denial. Credit Limit- Bank of Ugh-Merica Credit Card Themed Money Art. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse, Edition of 25, 24x18, Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper. Credit Limit: Bank of Ugh-Merica by Denial Credit Limit: Bank of Ugh-Merica is a powerful archival pigment fine art print created by street pop art and modern culture artist Daniel Bombardier, known as Denial. This artwork, released in a limited edition of 25, reflects Denial's sharp critique of consumerism and the financial systems that dominate modern life. Printed on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper, this 24x18-inch piece combines vivid colors, pop culture references, and satirical imagery to challenge the viewer’s perception of wealth, credit, and societal values. Each print is signed, numbered, and stamped on the reverse, making it a highly collectible piece within the street pop art and graffiti artwork community. The Visual Commentary on Consumerism Credit Limit: Bank of Ugh-Merica transforms the iconic design of a credit card into a biting critique of financial systems and American consumer culture. The central figure—a woman with the American flag painted across her face—symbolizes the allure and burden of patriotism tied to economic identity. Her exaggerated expression conveys disillusionment, mirroring the emotional weight of consumer debt and financial dependence. The replacement of the credit card’s typical branding with Denial’s satirical take highlights the disconnect between the promises of prosperity and the realities of economic inequality. This artwork encapsulates the power of street pop art to deliver meaningful social commentary through familiar visual cues. Denial’s Approach to Modern Pop Culture Art Daniel Bombardier, a Canadian artist, has built a career on critiquing consumerism, politics, and societal norms through his street pop art and graffiti artwork. Credit Limit: Bank of Ugh-Merica exemplifies his signature style of combining bold graphic elements with thought-provoking themes. By appropriating the imagery of a credit card—a symbol of wealth and status—Denial invites viewers to reconsider the systems they take for granted. His meticulous attention to detail, from the crisp archival pigment print to the high-quality MOAB fine art paper, ensures that the message is delivered with both clarity and impact. The Cultural Relevance of Credit Limit This artwork resonates in an era where conversations about economic disparity, debt, and consumer habits are more relevant than ever. Credit Limit: Bank of Ugh-Merica not only critiques the structures that perpetuate inequality but also questions the cultural obsession with material wealth and financial power. The limited edition nature of this piece enhances its significance, making it a statement of both artistic and cultural value. As a representation of Denial’s ability to merge humor, critique, and pop culture into a cohesive and impactful artwork, this piece stands as a testament to the enduring power of street pop art and graffiti artwork in challenging societal norms.
$385.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Credit Limit Black in the Red Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Credit Limit- Black in the Red Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Legend Street Art and Modern Pop Culture Artist Denial. Credit Limit- Black in the Red Credit Card Themed Money Art. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse, Edition of 25, 24x18, Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper. Denial’s art is strongly political and social since the artist takes specific positions against issues, such as capitalism, consumer culture, and advertisements. More importantly, the artist is aware of his choices and motivations: “I like to think of myself as activist pop art. How I relate with cartoons and graphics is a lot easier than I do with photo-realistic stuff" Another aspect of Denial's work is humor. His work is satirical, which, by definition, means that it uses humor as a confronting mechanism.
$385.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Credit Limit Chase Your Tail Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Credit Limit- Chase Your Tail Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Legend Street Art and Modern Pop Culture Artist Denial. Credit Limit- Chase Your Tail Credit Card Themed Money Art. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse, Edition of 25, 24x18, Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper. Credit Limit: Chase Your Tail by Denial Credit Limit: Chase Your Tail is a striking example of Denial’s ability to fuse humor, critique, and nostalgia into a powerful statement through street pop art and graffiti artwork. This 24x18-inch archival pigment fine art print is part of a limited edition of 25, each one numbered, signed, and stamped on the reverse, printed on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. Created by Canadian artist Daniel Bombardier, also known as Denial, this work continues his exploration of consumer culture and societal constructs, blending pop culture references with biting social commentary. The design uses the format of a credit card to critique financial systems and human behavior in a consumer-driven world. Thematic Depth and Symbolism Chase Your Tail reimagines a credit card with a fantastical twist, featuring a ferocious werewolf clutching a bag of money. This imagery encapsulates the relentless pursuit of wealth and the predatory nature of financial systems. The werewolf, a symbol of transformation and untamed instinct, serves as a metaphor for the primal and often destructive drives behind consumerism. The card's design, with its playful alteration of familiar branding, highlights the endless cycle of chasing financial stability while remaining ensnared in debt and materialism. This artwork invites viewers to reflect on the personal and societal consequences of these pursuits, all while maintaining the bold and accessible aesthetic of street pop art. Denial’s Artistic Perspective Daniel Bombardier’s work is celebrated for its wit, visual appeal, and ability to critique contemporary issues. Chase Your Tail exemplifies his talent for transforming everyday symbols into powerful artistic statements. By incorporating the universally recognizable format of a credit card, Denial draws attention to the ways in which consumer culture shapes identity and behavior. His use of vibrant colors and graphic elements reflects the influence of graffiti artwork, while the meticulous details of the archival pigment print demonstrate his commitment to quality. This combination of high craftsmanship and provocative themes is a hallmark of Denial’s approach to modern street pop art. The Cultural Impact of Chase Your Tail Chase Your Tail resonates with audiences by addressing themes of greed, power, and the cyclical nature of consumerism. It critiques the financial systems that perpetuate inequality and the cultural obsession with wealth, presenting these ideas in a format that is both accessible and impactful. The limited edition nature of the print enhances its value as a collectible, while the artwork’s message remains relevant in a world increasingly dominated by credit, debt, and economic disparity. This piece is a testament to Denial’s ability to use street pop art and graffiti artwork as a means of questioning societal norms and sparking critical conversations.
$385.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Credit Limit Chasing The Blues Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Credit Limit- Chasing The Blues Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Legend Street Art and Modern Pop Culture Artist Denial. 2020 Credit Limit- Chasing The Blues Credit Card Themed Money Art. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse, Edition of 25, 24x18, Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper. Credit Limit: Chasing The Blues by Denial Credit Limit: Chasing The Blues is a provocative archival pigment fine art print by Daniel Bombardier, professionally known as Denial. This artwork, created in 2020, is part of his iconic Credit Limit series, which critiques consumer culture and the psychological toll of financial systems. The piece measures 24x18 inches and is printed on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper, known for its exceptional quality and durability. As part of a limited edition of 25, each print is signed, numbered, and stamped on the reverse, ensuring its exclusivity and appeal to collectors of street pop art and graffiti artwork. The Visual Language of Chasing The Blues Chasing The Blues takes the familiar design of a credit card and transforms it into a striking visual metaphor for the emotional and financial burdens associated with modern consumerism. The central figure—a distressed woman rendered in vibrant blue hues—emphasizes the emotional toll of chasing financial stability in an increasingly debt-driven world. Her expression of anxiety and despair contrasts sharply with the sleek, corporate design of the credit card backdrop. By juxtaposing these elements, Denial critiques the illusion of luxury and freedom often associated with credit and highlights the hidden struggles it entails. The attention to detail and bold graphic style make this piece both visually arresting and thematically compelling. Denial’s Artistic Vision Daniel Bombardier is a Canadian artist whose work often explores themes of consumerism, capitalism, and societal constructs. Chasing The Blues exemplifies his ability to use humor, irony, and pop culture imagery to deliver powerful critiques. The use of a credit card as the central motif reflects his talent for repurposing everyday objects into thought-provoking works of art. Denial’s fusion of street pop art and graffiti artwork aesthetics results in pieces that are accessible yet deeply impactful. The archival pigment printing on high-quality MOAB paper ensures the vibrancy and longevity of his work, making it a standout piece in any collection. The Cultural Relevance of Credit Limit: Chasing The Blues Chasing The Blues resonates in a society where financial anxiety and material aspirations often go hand in hand. By blending corporate symbolism with raw human emotion, Denial invites viewers to question the cost of consumerism and the pressures of modern economic systems. This artwork serves as both a critique and a reflection of the pervasive influence of credit and debt in contemporary life. As part of a limited edition, it holds significant value not only as a collectible piece of art but also as a cultural artifact that captures the struggles of its time. Denial’s work continues to challenge conventions and spark dialogue, solidifying his position as a leading figure in street pop art and graffiti artwork.
$385.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Credit Limit Less is More Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Credit Limit- Less is More Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Legend Street Art and Modern Pop Culture Artist Denial. 2020 Credit Limit- Less is More Credit Card Themed Money Art. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse, Edition of 25, 24x18, Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper. Credit Limit: Less is More by Denial Credit Limit: Less is More is an engaging archival pigment fine art print by Canadian street pop art and graffiti artist Daniel Bombardier, also known as Denial. This artwork, part of his Credit Limit series, is a bold critique of consumer culture, financial dependency, and the pervasive influence of branding in modern society. Created in 2020, the piece measures 24x18 inches and is printed on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper, ensuring the highest level of detail and vibrancy. Each piece is part of a limited edition of 25, individually signed, numbered, and stamped on the reverse, making it a prized collectible among art enthusiasts and collectors. The Visual Commentary of Less is More Less is More transforms the familiar design of a credit card into a provocative artwork that challenges societal norms and values. The central figure, a woman with green skin and a melancholic expression, is a striking pop art reimagination. Her stylized appearance, complete with halftone patterns and bold colors, evokes the graphic aesthetic of mid-century comic books. The credit card design features branding and elements that are cleverly altered to reflect Denial’s critique of consumerism and the contradictions inherent in the phrase less is more. The world map in the background hints at the global reach of financial systems and their influence on individual lives. By combining these elements, the piece offers a layered exploration of the emotional and cultural impact of materialism. Denial’s Unique Artistic Approach Daniel Bombardier’s work is celebrated for its ability to combine humor, satire, and pop culture references into thought-provoking pieces. Less is More exemplifies his skill in turning everyday objects into vehicles for social commentary. The use of a credit card as the foundation of the artwork speaks to the ubiquity of consumerism and its impact on identity and values. Denial’s meticulous attention to detail, from the crispness of the archival pigment print to the dynamic interplay of colors, ensures that the piece is both visually stunning and thematically rich. His fusion of street pop art and graffiti artwork continues to challenge audiences to rethink their relationship with consumer culture. The Cultural Significance of Credit Limit: Less is More Less is More captures the paradoxical relationship between material aspirations and the psychological toll of consumerism. It critiques the notion of equating financial success with personal fulfillment, highlighting the emotional dissonance that often accompanies the pursuit of wealth. As part of the Credit Limit series, this artwork reinforces Denial’s commentary on the systems and ideologies that shape modern life. The limited edition nature of the piece underscores its exclusivity and value as a work of art that not only resonates aesthetically but also sparks critical conversations. Denial’s ability to blend bold visuals with profound messages ensures that Less is More remains a standout piece in the world of contemporary street pop art and graffiti artwork.
$385.00