Bear

6 artworks

  • Free Hugs Bear Art Toy by Frank Kozik

    Frank Kozik Free Hugs Bear Art Toy by Frank Kozik

    Free Hugs Bear Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Frank Kozik. 2021 This strange teddy bear art figure stands a statuesque 10 inches tall and is made of the highest quality vinyl. Give your guests an uneasy feeling with the newest creation from the twisted but genius mind of Frank Kozik with the Free Hugs Bear art figure. This disturbing designer art toy challenges you to find and interpret the hidden message behind this strange take on the classic teddy bear as many of Frank's art pieces do.

    $253.00

  • Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Luke Chueh Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Flocked Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh Kickstarter Limited Edition Vinyl Collectible Artwork by Street Graffiti Artist. 2018 Limited Edition Artwork of 93 with Cotton, Bag, and Tube. Based on Luke Chueh's original painting, The Prisoner ponders captivity in its many forms: physical, mental, or pharmaceutical. Ultra Rare Kickstarter Exclusive Extra Large XL 6 Inch Edition. Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear by Luke Chueh: Sculpting Emotional Confinement in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear by Luke Chueh is a 2018 Kickstarter exclusive collectible, limited to just 93 pieces worldwide. This rare extra-large vinyl edition transforms Chueh’s signature bear into a more physically imposing yet equally vulnerable presence. At six inches tall and flocked in vibrant green, the figure sits hunched and withdrawn, arms wrapped tightly around its knees, tucked into a gesture of protective silence. This version is packaged inside a deep green prescription-style plastic tube, labeled under the fictional strain Kuma OG. Accompanied by a cotton-lined pouch and official labeling, the toy carries the visual weight of both clinical control and emotional solitude. As a part of the wider Prisoner series, this XL edition expands Luke Chueh’s ongoing critique of psychological and pharmaceutical confinement through the visual language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Material and Scale as Tools of Conceptual Impact The use of scale in the Kush XL version heightens the emotional potency of the figure. Unlike the smaller editions, which evoke delicacy and intimacy, this larger size commands more physical space, forcing viewers to confront the quiet suffering it represents. The flocked green surface adds a layer of visual contradiction, inviting touch while symbolizing the lush appearance of calm that often hides distress. The presentation in a prescription tube references the aesthetics of cannabis dispensaries and pharmaceutical packaging, placing the bear in the middle of society’s ongoing conversation about medication, trauma management, and alternative therapy. The prescription-style label contextualizes the bear as both patient and product, surrounded by the implied control of dosage, labeling, and clinical oversight. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this kind of object challenges assumptions about what healing looks like and critiques the systems that monetize emotional relief. Luke Chueh and the Emotional Vocabulary of Toy-Based Street Pop Art Luke Chueh is a California-based artist known for using deceptively simple characters to convey deeply nuanced emotional states. His bear, a now-iconic symbol within his work, is never neutral. Whether painted or sculpted, it is always in the middle of a silent, internal dialogue. The Prisoner figure exemplifies Chueh’s practice of using posture, minimalism, and context to explore themes like depression, anxiety, addiction, and isolation. The Kush XL edition does not stray from these themes; rather, it amplifies them through texture and size. Chueh’s work belongs firmly within the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork canon, not only for its visual accessibility but also for its bold engagement with contemporary mental health struggles. The bear is at once relatable and haunting, caught between comfort and despair, between treatment and dependency. The Prisoner as a Sculptural Statement on Mental Health and Control Kush XL 6in The Prisoner is more than a collectible art toy—it is a sculptural representation of cultural truth. Limited to just 93 Kickstarter-exclusive editions, it holds significant value for collectors, not only due to its rarity but because of its raw, unfiltered emotional messaging. The packaging is not ornamental. It is part of the narrative, reinforcing the figure’s status as a symbol of medicated containment. The green colorway and dispensary-themed label introduce a layered commentary about the growing normalization of cannabis as both relief and crutch, expanding Chueh’s critique beyond pharmaceuticals alone. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, the figure functions like a street mural in miniature form—portable, powerful, and socially conscious. With this XL edition, Luke Chueh elevates designer toys into platforms for mental health discourse, using vinyl, flocking, and form to hold a mirror to both personal vulnerability and systemic response.

    $750.00

  • Together Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    John Vogl Together Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    Together Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by John Vogl Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 8 x 10 inches. Four screens on French Speckletone cover. Signed and numbered edition of 180. Released 28 November 2014.

    $103.00

  • Boy on Bear Giclee Print by Victo Ngai

    Victo Ngai Boy on Bear Giclee Print by Victo Ngai

    Boy on Bear Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Fine Art Print on 100% Cotton Hahnemühle Museum Etching Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Victo Ngai. Limited edition of 50. Signed and numbered. Due to how this artwork was made and stored by the artist, many of Ngai's older prints contain slight yellowing to the extreme upper and lower white margin that extends about 1mm. This does not effect the image at all and the prints are perfect besides this.

    $262.00

  • Good Morning Coffee Second Edition Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    John Vogl Good Morning Coffee Second Edition Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    Good Morning Coffee, Second Edition Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by John Vogl Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. Good Morning Coffee. Second edition. Different colors from the first edition. 8 by 10 inches. Four screens printed on French Speckletone stock. Signed and numbered edition of 190. Released 28 November 2014.

    $103.00

  • Sale -40% Damaged Bear 72 Original Marker Drawing by Jermaine Rogers

    Jermaine Rogers Damaged Bear 72 Original Marker Drawing by Jermaine Rogers

    Damaged Bear 72 Original Color Marker Drawing by Jermaine Rogers on Wove Fine Art Paper Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2007 Signed Original Marker Ink Drawing Size 6.5x10. "Something is very wrong with me: I am falling apart...'" Damaged Bear 72 by Jermaine Rogers – Psychological Symbolism in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Damaged Bear 72 is a 2007 original marker ink drawing by American artist Jermaine Rogers, executed on wove fine art paper and measuring 6.5 x 10 inches. Signed by the artist, the piece is an emotionally raw and visually haunting entry in Rogers’s ongoing exploration of vulnerability, identity, and collapse. The drawing features a wide-eyed bear figure rendered in loose, expressive linework with patches of red that appear as wounds or signs of decay. Numbered 72 on its forehead and accompanied by hand-lettered text reading Something is very wrong with me: I am falling apart, the artwork merges character design with psychological confession. This bear is not a mascot or a toy—it is a vessel for emotional trauma, painted with urgency, humor, and existential dread. The piece exists as a stark and poignant work within the world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where imagery speaks louder than exposition. Visual Language of Inner Collapse The bear figure is a recurring character in Jermaine Rogers’s visual universe, often used to explore themes of innocence broken and identity under pressure. In Damaged Bear 72, the character’s sagging posture and panicked eyes suggest disorientation and surrender. Red ink blots mark its body like open wounds, and its blank, swirling irises indicate an emotional unraveling. The text above the figure reads like a journal entry or whispered confession, turning the drawing into a narrative fragment that blends visual and literary anxiety. Rogers uses minimal color—mostly black, pink, red, and cyan—but every mark contributes to the sense of urgency and internal fragmentation. The simplicity of materials contrasts the complexity of message, a method that aligns with the unfiltered nature of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Marker Drawing as Emotional Broadcast Executed entirely in marker on fine art wove paper, the drawing reflects immediacy and tactile presence. The lines are loose, intentional, and flawed in a way that enhances their sincerity. Rogers’s use of bleeding ink and uneven pressure brings a sense of performance to the act of drawing, capturing not just form but emotional atmosphere. The paper holds every smudge and hesitation, turning what could be a sketch into a finished emotional document. The bear’s open expression, numbered forehead, and decaying appearance resonate as symbols of individuality lost in systemic tension. In the context of graffiti and pop character traditions, Rogers’s bear stands apart by leaning into fragility instead of bravado. Jermaine Rogers and the Anatomy of Emotional Resistance Damaged Bear 72 represents Jermaine Rogers at his most exposed, offering a piece that is both a visual statement and a confessional artifact. His work operates where emotion meets iconography, turning cartoonish figures into messengers of truth and despair. In the world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece is not about street dominance or design flash—it is about the quiet, painful moments that define human experience. Rogers’s ability to inject philosophical and emotional gravity into character-driven imagery places him among the most nuanced voices in the genre. This bear does not roar—it pleads, stares, and disintegrates in front of the viewer, offering no solutions, only honesty. That honesty is what transforms Damaged Bear 72 from a sketch into a relic of modern anxiety, drawn in lines that refuse to lie.

    $750.00 $450.00

Bear Graffiti Street Pop Art

Bears in Street Pop Art and Graffiti: A Symbolic Exploration

Bears have long stood as powerful symbols in various cultures worldwide, and their representation in street pop art and graffiti artwork is no exception. In urban art, the bear is often depicted in myriad ways, ranging from fierce and powerful to whimsical and playful. These depictions not only showcase the versatility of this majestic animal as an artistic subject but also reflect the diverse meanings and interpretations it carries in street art.

Bear Imagery in the Work of Renowned Street Artists

Numerous street artists have incorporated bear imagery into their works, using this animal to convey various messages and themes. For example, some artists depict bears realistically and majestically, highlighting their power and presence as one of nature's most formidable creatures. Others take a more whimsical approach, using the bear's image to add a touch of playfulness and whimsy to their pieces. This duality in representation speaks to the multifaceted nature of the bear as a symbol, capable of embodying strength and gentleness simultaneously.

Bears as Symbols in Urban Art Contexts

In street pop art and graffiti, bears symbolize various aspects of human life and society. They can represent strength, courage, and resilience, reflecting the struggles and triumphs of urban life. Alternatively, bears are sometimes depicted as gentle giants, symbolizing peace, tranquility, and the need for conservation and respect for nature. These diverse interpretations allow artists to use bear imagery to comment on social and environmental issues, making their art engaging and thought-provoking.

Techniques and Styles in Depicting Bears in Street Art

The techniques and styles used to depict bears in street art vary widely, showcasing the creativity and versatility of street artists. Some artists opt for a hyper-realistic style, capturing every detail of the bear's form and texture, making it come alive on the urban canvas. Others prefer a more abstract or stylized approach, using bold colors and geometric shapes or even incorporating fantasy elements to create a unique representation of the bear. This diversity in artistic approaches ensures that bear imagery in street art remains fresh, dynamic, and open to interpretation. In street pop art and graffiti artwork, the bear serves as a powerful symbol, a canvas for expression, and a reflection of the diverse themes and messages urban artists seek to convey. From realistic depictions that emphasize the bear's raw power to whimsical portrayals that highlight its more gentle aspects, the bear remains a popular and compelling subject in the ever-evolving world of street art.
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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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