Bunny Rabbit

3 artworks

  • Smorkin Labbit 10 Red Art Toy by Frank Kozik

    Frank Kozik Smorkin Labbit 10 Red Art Toy by Frank Kozik

    Smorkin Labbit 10- Red Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Frank Kozik. Sooo shiny. Slick, sleek, and smorkin’ hot, this 10-inch luscious Labbit is a super smooth version of Frank Kozik's beloved chain smoker. Adorned with a matte cigarette and gloss coating (for improved aerodynamic action), the Smorkin' Labbit 10" Vinyl Figure by Frank Kozik - Lustre Gloss Red Edition is truly the look of the future.

    $218.00

  • Naivety Scene Era 12 Original Marker Drawing Canvas by Blake Jones

    Blake Jones Naivety Scene Era 12 Original Marker Drawing Canvas by Blake Jones

    Naivety Scene Era 12 Original Marker Drawing Canvas by Blake Jones Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2019 Signed Original Color Marker on Hand Drawing Size 12x12 Naivety Scene Era 12 by Blake Jones – Playful Chaos in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Naivety Scene Era 12 is a 2019 original 12 x 12 inch hand-drawn color marker artwork on canvas by American artist Blake Jones. Signed by the artist, the work serves as a condensed visual playground filled with Jones’s signature characters, graphic gestures, and whimsical abstractions. The surface is a chaotic and joyful composition of colorful iconography rendered in bold, cartoonish lines, each figure interacting with the others in a free-flowing rhythm. Lightning bolts, abstract cubes, cake slices, smiling ghosts, three-eyed faces, bunny ears, jellyfish, and doodle lettering all coexist in a dense tapestry of imagination. These forms are drawn with intentional spontaneity using a variety of colored markers, creating a visual language that captures the essence of youth, spontaneity, and low-stakes play with high-impact composition. The Language of Icons and Innocence Blake Jones’s work consistently focuses on accessible characters and nostalgic aesthetics without sacrificing depth or intention. In Naivety Scene Era 12, the artist channels the visual memory of childhood drawings, sticker books, and doodles on notebook margins into a curated chaos that resonates beyond its surface charm. These drawings, while appearing naïve, are placed with deliberate design. Each element contributes to the rhythm and flow of the canvas, offering multiple focal points that encourage playful exploration. Jones’s ability to balance graphic flatness with layered spontaneity reflects his deep roots in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where repetition, symbolism, and immediacy drive both the message and the aesthetic. His linework, free of digital polish, is a declaration of hand-drawn authenticity in an image-obsessed culture. Color Theory and Street-Inspired Technique The piece’s vibrancy stems not from complex shading or perspective, but from confident color play and an understanding of balance in clutter. The colors—neon pinks, bright yellows, cool blues, and jet blacks—are used sparingly and effectively. Each hue pops against the canvas’s white ground, giving every doodle space to breathe while also contributing to a shared vibrational field. The use of color marker as medium reinforces the idea of immediacy and improvisation, both hallmarks of graffiti sketch culture. Blake Jones bridges studio work with the ethos of the streets by treating each surface like a page in a blackbook—unfiltered, raw, and expressive. Blake Jones and the Comfort of Visual Noise With Naivety Scene Era 12, Blake Jones captures the feeling of a world that is busy but never burdensome. The energy is light yet infectious, the lines are imperfect but confident, and the visual clutter is strangely calming. His work speaks to a contemporary moment where overstimulation is standard, yet his imagery responds not with critique, but with comfort. In the broader context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this canvas serves as a meditation on creativity unbound—pure mark-making that honors intuition over precision. Blake Jones does not ask the viewer to decipher meaning. Instead, he invites them to find joy in the patterns, humor in the absurd, and wonder in the ordinary. This piece is not simply an artwork; it is an experience in visual freedom.

    $1,000.00

  • Hold Your Tongue Giclee Print by Brandon Sopinsky

    Brandon Sopinsky Hold Your Tongue Giclee Print by Brandon Sopinsky

    Hold Your Tongue Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Brandon Sopinsky. Signed Limited Edition 2011

    $134.00

Bunny Rabbit

Bunny Rabbit Imagery in Contemporary Art

The bunny rabbit has hopped into the heart of street pop art and graffiti, becoming an enduring motif used by artists to explore themes ranging from innocence and purity to the subversion of these ideals. Often imbued with a soft and endearing quality, these creatures are reimagined within the urban art context to communicate a wide array of messages.

Pop Art's Adoption of the Bunny Rabbit

In pop art, the bunny rabbit often appears as an icon of commercialization, reminiscent of mascots used in marketing. Artists like Jeff Koons have elevated the bunny to high art, playing with materials and scale to challenge perceptions of value and artistry. In contrast, street artists might stencil, spray, or paste bunnies onto urban surfaces, juxtaposing innocence against the backdrop of the concrete jungle.

Symbolism and Interpretation

Within the framework of street and pop art, bunnies can symbolize everything from rebirth and new beginnings to the vulnerability of nature in the face of urban expansion. Some artists use the rabbit to make political statements, while others revel in the playful and whimsical aspects that the imagery naturally evokes.

Techniques and Aesthetic Choices

The depiction of bunnies in street art varies from hyper-realistic to abstract, with each artist bringing their unique style and technique to the forefront. The medium of choice—be it spray paint, wheatpaste, or stencils—further dictates the aesthetic, allowing for a diverse representation of this common theme.

The Bunny in the Urban Art Landscape

As a subject in the urban art landscape, the bunny rabbit continues to evolve, with artists worldwide adapting its image to speak to contemporary societal issues or to add beauty and intrigue to the streets. It is a motif that resonates globally, transcending cultural and linguistic barriers.

Footer image

© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

    • Amazon
    • American Express
    • Apple Pay
    • Bancontact
    • Diners Club
    • Discover
    • Google Pay
    • iDEAL
    • Mastercard
    • PayPal
    • Shop Pay
    • Visa

    Login

    Forgot your password?

    Don't have an account yet?
    Create account