Bubble Letters
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Indie184- Soraya Marquez Full Force AP Silkscreen Print by Indie184- Soraya Marquez
Full Force AP Artist Proof Silkscreen Print by Indie184- Soraya Marquez Hand-Pulled Screen on 320gsm Coventry Rag Paper Mural Pop Street Artwork. AP Artist Proof 2021 Signed & Marked AP Limited Edition Artwork Size 35x20 Hand Deckled Full Force AP by Indie184 – Feminine Power and Urban Color in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Full Force AP is a 2021 artist proof silkscreen print by Soraya Marquez, known globally under the name Indie184. Measuring 35 x 20 inches, this piece is hand-pulled on 320gsm Coventry Rag fine art paper and features hand-deckled edges, accentuating its studio-crafted quality and tactile authenticity. Marked AP for artist proof and signed by the artist, this version carries a unique rarity beyond the standard edition, making it particularly significant for collectors of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The artwork explodes with layers of vibrant color, classic film iconography, graffiti motifs, and urban symbolism, presenting a full-spectrum statement on femininity, resistance, and visual culture. Portraiture, Empowerment, and Visual Echo The composition centers on mirrored grayscale portraits of a glamorous, vintage-styled woman whose expressions and posture communicate strength and introspection. Her image is doubled and placed within a landscape of graffiti tags, starbursts, paint splatters, and vivid lightning bolts—elements that create both chaos and cohesion. The lightning bolts, one orange and one yellow, emerge from each figure’s head like symbols of mental energy or forceful clarity. The phrase Full Force blazes across the bottom in colorful bubble letters, tagged in graffiti style with hearts and dots, standing as both a title and a declaration. Indie184 transforms these women into icons of power, placing them at the center of the visual noise that typically overwhelms feminine presence in urban culture. Technique and Texture in Artist Proof Craftsmanship The use of hand-pulled silkscreen printing on heavyweight 320gsm Coventry Rag paper allows each color and layer to remain distinct while also embracing texture and slight imperfections that add life to the work. The hand-deckled edges reinforce the piece’s raw character, contrasting the refined photographic imagery with street-inspired surface disruption. Every paint drip, tag, and layer of spray-effect coloring is deliberate yet expressive, embodying Indie184’s ability to channel mural-scale energy into fine art dimensions. As an artist proof, this print represents an early and personal take from the artist’s own studio, with minor variances that reflect the organic nature of silkscreen production. It is more than a reproduction—it is a part of the process. Indie184 and the Rhythm of Rebellion in Urban Feminism Born in New York City, Soraya Marquez blends her roots in graffiti and hip-hop with an unmistakable pop sensibility. Through works like Full Force AP, she channels that background into a form of creative resistance—where glitter, glam, and graffiti collide without compromise. Her characters are not passive objects but focal forces, navigating and commanding the visual field rather than being consumed by it. With every sticker-like heart, hand-tagged phrase, and explosive splash of color, Indie184 speaks to women who exist with pride in public space, carving their own definitions of beauty, strength, and voice. In the landscape of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Full Force AP stands not only as a celebration of aesthetic but as a declaration of presence, where art meets attitude and culture is rewritten in full color.
$1,500.00 $1,275.00
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Jessica Hess Break Free 29 HPM Archival Print by Jessica Hess
Break Free 29 Limited Edition Hand-Embellished HPM Archival Pigment Prints on 290gsm Moab Fine Art Paper by Jessica Hess Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. Hand-Embellished Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm Moab Fine Art Paper Size: 24 x 20 Inches Release: July 26, 2019 “Break Free” is part of a new series of paintings focusing on the strange abstraction of manmade structures through disuse, decay, and demolition in contrast with the beauty of their reclamation by nature. All will return to the Earth one day." - Jessica Hess Jessica Hess’s Break Free 29: The Architecture of Decay and the Language of Graffiti Jessica Hess’s Break Free 29 is a hand-embellished archival pigment print measuring 24 x 20 inches, released in 2019 as part of a series that documents abandoned urban architecture overtaken by graffiti and natural elements. Printed on 290gsm Moab fine art paper, this limited edition exemplifies Hess’s mastery in photorealistic painting and her ability to transform urban ruin into visual poetry. The image captures a collapsed interior space—possibly a warehouse or industrial relic—where nature begins to reclaim its territory, and every visible surface is layered in tags, murals, and weathered pigment. The work is not a simple celebration of street art. It is a nuanced meditation on impermanence, resilience, and transformation. Hess does not stylize or exaggerate the graffiti; she paints it faithfully, respecting it as an honest record of human mark-making. The decaying beams, broken floorboards, and skeletal remains of the roof add to the visual complexity. Everything in the composition is in flux. The structure is failing, yet the surfaces breathe with new life. Green plants push through the cracks. Bright sprays of color resist silence. The collapse is not an end, but an evolution. Photorealism as Preservation of Street Pop Ephemera Jessica Hess’s work functions as a form of visual preservation. By painstakingly recreating graffiti-covered ruins in photorealistic detail, she immortalizes temporary art in the face of time, destruction, and erasure. In Break Free 29, no surface is left untouched—pillars, window frames, pipes, and debris are covered in overlapping layers of aerosol marks, stickers, and paint drips. Each tag is an anonymous voice, part of a larger visual conversation layered over time. Hess does not edit or curate these voices. She captures them in all their raw complexity. The technique of hand-embellishment in each print adds to the authenticity of the piece. It reinforces the physical nature of graffiti itself—built through layers, retouches, and repetition. The painted elements do not merely replicate; they reactivate the image. Hess’s use of high-fidelity realism and handwork bridges the worlds of graffiti and fine art without compromising either. It reflects her deep respect for the spaces and the artists who have left their imprint there. Entropy, Memory, and the Rewilding of Urban Space Break Free 29 contributes to the ongoing dialogue within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork about the meaning of space, decay, and authorship. Hess doesn’t paint the act of graffiti in motion—she paints its aftermath, its documentation. The structure she depicts is no longer defined by its original function. It is a new environment shaped by collapse, intervention, and neglect. The architecture becomes an accidental canvas, and nature slowly encroaches as a silent collaborator. There is no central human figure in the scene, but human presence is everywhere—in the spray lines, in the tags, in the layers of messages written across time. The graffiti doesn’t just decorate the ruins; it gives them meaning in their disuse. Hess’s framing of this space reveals an alternate kind of beauty—one not built on design, but on decomposition and reoccupation. Plants grow through concrete. Sunlight filters through the broken roof. The manmade yields, and the earth begins to rewrite the structure’s story. Through Break Free 29, Jessica Hess presents ruin not as loss but as transformation. It’s a portrait of impermanence painted with care and precision, reminding us that nothing is truly static—not cities, not art, not nature. Everything is in motion, and everything eventually breaks free.
$503.00
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Indie184- Soraya Marquez Full Force Silkscreen Print by Indie184- Soraya Marquez
Full Force Silkscreen Print by Indie184- Soraya Marquez Hand-Pulled Screen on 320gsm Coventry Rag Paper Mural Pop Street Artwork. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 199 Artwork Size 35x20 Hand Deckled Full Force by Indie184 – Color, Confidence, and Culture in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Full Force is a 2021 hand-pulled silkscreen print by Soraya Marquez, professionally known as Indie184. Printed on 320gsm Coventry Rag paper, this vibrant edition measures 35 x 20 inches and is hand deckled for a raw, authentic finish. Produced in a limited edition of 199 signed and numbered prints, the work embodies Indie184’s explosive style—an energetic mix of graffiti layering, pop portraiture, and personal empowerment themes. The centerpiece of the image features a mirrored pair of classic Hollywood-style female profiles, each accented with stylized lightning bolts extending from their heads. These powerful figures are framed by technicolor graffiti splashes, starbursts, bubble lettering, and paint drips, building a high-impact visual language that defines Marquez’s contribution to the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork movement. Empowerment Through Street Art Feminism Indie184, born Soraya Marquez in New York City, is a self-taught street artist with Dominican roots whose work is rooted in female empowerment, hip-hop culture, and graffiti heritage. In Full Force, the symmetrical female portraits symbolize strength and reflection, offset by bold lightning bolts and surrounded by graffiti chaos that communicates vitality, resilience, and creative force. The title Full Force is painted in large, expressive graffiti lettering across the bottom of the print, reinforcing the theme of power—emotional, creative, and cultural. Indie184’s ability to balance beauty, rebellion, and personal voice places her at the forefront of contemporary urban art, where women’s perspectives are increasingly asserting space and defining aesthetics within a historically male-dominated visual landscape. Technique, Texture, and Visual Energy The print utilizes traditional silkscreen methods to apply multiple layers of color, texture, and graphic components, each with high opacity and crisp detail. The 320gsm Coventry Rag paper provides both durability and an absorbent surface, ideal for capturing the complex interplay of hand-drawn elements, graffiti marks, and portrait stenciling. The hand deckled edges of the paper add an organic frame that enhances the street-born energy of the composition. Indie184’s print technique mirrors her large-scale mural work, translating the expressive power of wall art into a fine art format without compromising intensity. The result is a piece that is equally at home in a gallery or in a collector’s urban-inspired interior. Indie184’s Fusion of Street Grit and Pop Glamour Full Force represents Indie184’s approach to cultural fusion—where graffiti tagging meets high fashion, classic film icons meet spray paint aesthetics, and feminine elegance meets the raw voice of the streets. Her use of bold colors and layered design speaks to the spirit of the city, while her incorporation of figures, text, and symbols reflect themes of identity, transformation, and visibility. The work is not just decorative; it is declarative. It states that graffiti can be glamorous, that pop can be political, and that femininity can be fierce. In the broader world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Full Force exemplifies the power of visual expression to challenge, celebrate, and shift culture. Indie184 continues to expand her influence across continents while staying true to her roots—bold, unapologetic, and always in full force.
$1,100.00 $935.00
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Cope2- Fernando Carlo Stacked Bubble Throwies Pink Silkscreen Print by Cope2- Fernando Carlo
Stacked Bubble Throwies- Pink 2-Color Hand-Pulled Deckled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on 335gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper by Cope2 Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. Signed 2018 2-Color Screen Print on Hand-Deckled 335gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper Size: 16 x 20 Inches Release: August 04, 2018 Run of: 20 It’s all by nature, not by art school. It’s from my very soul, with all my energy. Everyone is great in his special way. My way is to be an artist.”, he claims in one of his interviews. He started as part of the underground scene of New York and, even though tagging of walls and subway trains brought him to jail, this further extended his reputation and never discouraged him from writing. On the contrary, such legal issues led him to be open about experimenting with paintings canvas as an alternative to street art.
$352.00