Disney

3 artworks

  • Once Upon A Time No More 5 19x20 Archival Print by Mimi Yoon

    Mimi Yoon Once Upon A Time No More 5 19x20 Archival Print by Mimi Yoon

    Once Upon A Time No More 5- 19x20 Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Prints on Heavyweight Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Street Art and Pop Culture Artist Mimi Yoon. 2019 Signed Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 19x20 Archival Pigment Print on Heavyweight Fine Art Paper Size: 19 x 20 Inches Release: January 01, 2019 Signed Numbered

    $450.00

  • Suckadelic Suckpax Silkscreen Print by The Sucklord

    The Sucklord Suckadelic Suckpax Silkscreen Print by The Sucklord

    Suckadelic Suckpax 4-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by The Sucklord Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. 2021 Size: 19″x25″ Edition of 50 Signed, Numbered and hand-splattered by The Super Sucklord The Sucklord’s “Suckadelic Suckpax Print” is a limited edition, four-color screen print. Embracing the retro design of trading card wax packaging straight out of the ’80s, this colorful classic is sure to make you smirk as you gaze upon the man himself, wearing his notorious Boba Fett helmet, carrying a ghetto blaster! Limited to only 50 signed, numbered and hand-paint splatted copies with an image based upon the Suckpax Series 2 release’s art. We’re not sure if buying this will make you an asshole… but you’ll certainly feel like one if you don’t!

    $214.00

  • Rap in Blue HPM Acrylic Spray Paint Silkscreen Print by Faile

    Faile Rap in Blue HPM Acrylic Spray Paint Silkscreen Print by Faile

    Rap in Blue HPM Acrylic Spray Paint Silkscreen Print by Faile Screen Print on Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Pop Street Art Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Glitter, Spray Paint, Acrylic HPM Embellished Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 19x25 Silkscreen Print of Darth Vader in Classic Sweater With Girlfriend Hugging & The Word Rap Rap in Blue by Faile: Pop Culture Clash in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Rap in Blue is a 2023 hand-embellished silkscreen print by the artist collective Faile, combining elements of pop parody, retro comic style, and subcultural nostalgia. Measuring 19x25 inches, this limited edition of 50 is printed on fine art paper and finished with layers of glitter, spray paint, and acrylic paint, making each piece a unique hand-painted multiple. The artwork features a couple mid-embrace, with the male figure wearing a Darth Vader helmet and a vintage-style sweater, while the woman, dressed in a noir-style jacket and domino mask, leans in close. The word Rap dominates the bottom third of the image in bold typography, creating a textual anchor that disrupts the composition’s vintage sensibility. The image plays with identity, anonymity, and cultural remix—core themes in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Stylistic Fusion and Subversive Iconography Faile’s Rap in Blue exemplifies the group’s ability to recontextualize mass imagery through layered visual narrative and material disruption. The piece references pulp romance covers and old comic strips, using halftone textures and simplified shading while simultaneously inserting the surreal juxtaposition of Darth Vader’s unmistakable helmet. The sweater on the Vader figure adds absurd normalcy, contrasting the sci-fi mask with suburban fashion, while the woman's masked eyes hint at mystery and performance. The spray paint splatter and hand-brushed embellishments break the surface polish, giving the piece physical energy and the immediacy of the street. Glitter is applied in select areas, catching light and adding tension between kitsch and reverence. In the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, these contradictions drive the message—where recognition is weaponized and nostalgia is reassembled into something strange, personal, and political. Process, Materials, and Unique Presentation Each print in the edition is hand-signed and numbered by Faile, with no two pieces exactly alike. The silkscreen process forms the base structure, but the added acrylic brushwork and layered spray give each work a customized, almost collage-like texture. The use of archival fine art paper ensures stability while allowing absorbency for the mixed-media embellishments. The word Rap is rendered in thick black print, anchoring the composition and tying it to urban music, street culture, or even misunderstood slang, depending on the viewer's interpretation. The physical surface holds evidence of hand movements—splatters, drips, and streaks—connecting the piece to the tactile language of graffiti walls and paste-ups, where icon and slogan live together in visual confrontation. Faile’s Role in Contemporary Street Pop Expression Founded in Brooklyn in the late 1990s, Faile is the collaborative project of Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller. Known for their ability to fuse street aesthetics with fine art polish, their work blends advertising, pop fiction, spiritual symbols, and social commentary. Rap in Blue sits comfortably within Faile’s broader practice, where the collision of mass culture and memory is the central terrain. The Vader figure is not just a nod to franchise dominance—it’s a symbol of masked identity, commercial saturation, and the lingering power of media-based characters in contemporary life. By offsetting this figure with a noir-drenched romantic embrace and an unexplained bold slogan, Faile reframes the scene as both absurd and meaningful. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece functions as visual sampling—layered like a mixtape, referencing multiple decades, and filtered through a lens that values rupture, remix, and rebellion.

    $2,599.00

Disney Graffiti Street Pop Art

The Magic on the Walls: Disney's Influence on Street Pop Art

The Walt Disney Company, with its iconic characters and fairy-tale narratives, has left an indelible mark on pop culture that has transcended cinema and television screens to burst onto city walls worldwide. Street pop art and graffiti artwork have often drawn from Disney's vast catalog of characters, reimagining them in various urban contexts to reflect contemporary issues, celebrate nostalgia, or even subvert the very ideals that Disney espouses. The omnipresence of Disney in street art is a testament to the company's pervasive influence on global culture.

Reimagining Disney: A Street Artist's Playground

In street art, Disney characters are reinterpreted through the lenses of myriad artists, each bringing their unique perspective to these beloved icons. With his universal recognizability, Mickey Mouse often appears in graffiti artwork, sometimes as a symbol of innocence and joy, other times as a critique of commercialism and corporate hegemony. The interpretations are as diverse as the artists themselves, ranging from faithful recreations to satirical twists that challenge viewers to see these childhood figures in a new light. Similarly, Disney princesses have been a popular subject, with street artists often using them to discuss themes of femininity, power, and identity. These familiar figures take on new roles in the narrative of street art, transforming from damsels in distress to empowered women, reflecting the changing attitudes towards gender roles in society.

Disney and the Dichotomy of Street Art

The juxtaposition of Disney's often idealized characters against the raw backdrop of the urban landscape creates a dichotomy central to the appeal of using Disney themes in street art. This contrast highlights the tension between the escapism offered by Disney's narratives and the reality of the streets where issues of poverty, inequality, and resistance are more palpable. The use of Disney characters in street pop art is also a dialogue about the commodification of culture and the pervasive nature of branding. Artists sometimes use these characters to comment on consumer culture and the impact of global corporations on individual expression and societal values. Artists disrupt every day by placing characters like Donald Duck or Goofy in unexpected, often incongruous situations, encouraging the public to engage with the art and its issues. Disney's influence on street pop art and graffiti artwork is significant, offering a familiar lexicon with which artists can engage the public in meaningful discourse. Whether through affectionate homage or sharp critique, the incorporation of Disney themes into street art reflects the company's entrenched position in the cultural zeitgeist. The artists who draw from Disney's portfolio contribute to a continuously evolving conversation, ensuring that Disney's magic remains not just within the confines of theme parks and screens but alive and vibrant on the walls of cities around the world.
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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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