Doctor/Medical/Medicine

18 artworks

  • Anatomy of the Shark Giclee Print by Max Dalton

    Max Dalton Anatomy of the Shark Giclee Print by Max Dalton

    Anatomy of the Shark Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Hot-Press Italian Watercolor Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Max Dalton. Printed Oceans is PangeaSeed Foundation's fine art print program that raises awareness and educates about pressing marine environmental issues through the lens of some of today's most respected creative minds. Since 2012, we have released over 100 original fine art print editions that highlight endangered marine species and ocean habitats. These stunning editions help to bring important conservation stories into homes and workspaces the world over creating critical dialogue and inspiring positive action. Through the purchase of these carefully hand-crafted, limited edition artworks, you are not only powering the groundbreaking work of PangeaSeed Foundation in communities across the globe but also contributing to the livelihoods of our supporting ARTivists. Together, via art and activism, we can help save our oceans. PangeaSeed's second annual summer series of the groundbreaking Sea Walls: Murals for Oceans festival July 17-26 2015 in Cozumel, Mexico. Sea Walls: Murals for Oceans is the first movement of its kind helping to save our seas via public art and activism (ARTivism). PangeaSeed's second annual summer festival will feature over 25 renowned contemporary artists from across the globe collaborating to shine a greatly needed spotlight on pressing ocean environmental issues - while helping to educate and inspire individuals and communities to protect the planet's most important ecosystem: the ocean.

    $214.00

  • LIE 13 Margaret Sanger Silkscreen Print by Aelhra

    Aelhra LIE 13 Margaret Sanger Silkscreen Print by Aelhra

    LIE 13 Margaret Sanger Limited Edition 2-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Aelhra Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2014 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 30 Artwork Size 18x24 Third International Eugenics, New York City, August 21-23 1932

    $217.00

  • Covid No 19 Rose Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

  • Covid No 19 Mauve Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

  • Yogi on Xanax Silkscreen Print by Ben Frost

    Ben Frost Yogi on Xanax Silkscreen Print by Ben Frost

    Yogi on Xanax 9-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite Paper by Ben Frost Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. 2022 Signed & Numbered Ben Frost Yogi on Xanax, 9-color Hand-Pulled Screen Print on Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite, 160 lb Cover 24 x24 in., 61 x 61 cm Edition of 50, signed & numbered by the artist Printed by POP!NK Editions Yogi on Xanax by Ben Frost – Consumer Critique in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Yogi on Xanax is a 2022 limited edition 9-color hand-pulled screen print by contemporary Australian artist Ben Frost, printed on 160 lb Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite cover stock in a 24 x 24 inch format. Signed and numbered in an edition of 50, this bold silkscreen work was produced by POP!NK Editions, renowned for their meticulous craftsmanship in contemporary art print production. The piece combines pharmaceutical packaging design with nostalgic cartoon imagery to produce a visually explosive and conceptually loaded commentary on modern consumer culture. Frost inserts the wide-eyed face of Yogi Bear into the unmistakable layout of a Xanax prescription label, transforming an innocent animated figure into a symbol of medication culture, psychological sedation, and branded addiction. Pharma Design Meets Cartoon Chaos Ben Frost is internationally known for his provocative use of pop culture iconography, and Yogi on Xanax exemplifies his strategy of visual collision. The imagery reappropriates the familiar Xanax box, typically associated with clinical calm, and injects it with the erratic energy of Yogi Bear’s wide grin and hypnotic spiral eye. The polished pharmaceutical layout clashes with the expressive cartoon illustration, creating a moment of visual and conceptual tension. Frost’s technique exposes the strange intersection between happiness, dependence, and entertainment. By overlaying humor onto something serious, he invites viewers to question how commercial products—from children's cartoons to anxiety medications—are embedded into cultural behavior and identity. This blend of absurdity and critique is central to Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where language and imagery from mass culture are subverted for public commentary. Material Precision and Production Integrity The print’s execution on Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite paper ensures a pristine, high-fidelity surface that supports the layered ink of the 9-color silkscreen process. The heavyweight 160 lb cover stock provides durability and a gallery-quality finish, elevating the piece from poster to collectible artwork. Each color is individually hand-pulled, resulting in rich, solid applications that enhance the saturation and intensity of Frost’s bold graphics. The print’s 24 x 24 inch dimensions offer a perfect square composition, aligning the clinical symmetry of packaging design with the oversized personality of Yogi Bear’s warped cartoon form. Frost’s decision to preserve the integrity of the Xanax design while inserting his own subversive visuals makes this work a standout example of pop art precision with street-level satire. Ben Frost and the Visual Language of Commercial Rebellion Ben Frost continues to be a defining voice in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, using the language of branding, packaging, and iconography to reflect the contradictions of contemporary life. In Yogi on Xanax, he exploits the comfort of nostalgia to highlight uncomfortable truths. The cartoon becomes the messenger for a culture that medicates joy and aestheticizes control. Frost’s unique visual style—bold lines, saturated colors, and razor-sharp layout—presents a clear but distorted mirror to viewers, forcing them to reconcile the ridiculous with the real. His work does not ask for passive admiration; it demands a response. Yogi on Xanax stands as a satirical totem of consumer anxiety, wrapped in packaging that feels as familiar as it is jarring. This print does not just exist in the world of contemporary pop—it defines what it looks like when pop turns critical.

    $917.00

  • Dobermann Anatomy Archival Print by Nychos

    Nychos Dobermann Anatomy Archival Print by Nychos

    Dobermann Anatomy Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on Velvet Cotton Fine Art Paper by Artist Nychos, Street Pop Art Graffiti Legend. 2021 Signed & Numbered 24 x 24 inch / 61 x 61 cm Fine art print by NYCHOS Limited Edition of 111 Velvet Fine Art cotton fiber paper Hand-signed & numbered Nychos, an iconic figure in the world of street pop art and graffiti, presents a striking depiction of the Dobermann breed in his artwork titled "Dobermann Anatomy." Renowned for his unique anatomical explorations, Nychos delivers a layered perspective that delves deep into the physical structure of the canine, unravelling the layers from skeletal to muscular and finally the full-bodied representation of the Dobermann. The result is a captivating piece that marries scientific precision with artistic flair. Set against a muted teal backdrop, the sequential progression of the Dobermann from bone to flesh provides a detailed insight into the intricate anatomy of the dog. The vivid colors used to distinguish between the muscles, organs, and bones capture the viewer's attention, offering a visual treat that blurs the lines between educational illustration and pop art. The meticulously crafted details are a testament to Nychos's dedication to his craft, further establishing him as a master of his genre. Crafted in 2021, this fine art print stands as a testament to the evolution of street art, pushing the boundaries of what is traditionally expected from the medium. Measuring 24 x 24 inches, the artwork is printed on velvet fine art cotton fiber paper, ensuring longevity and a rich texture that complements the depth of the piece. As a limited edition release, there are only 111 pieces available, each of which is hand-signed and numbered by Nychos himself. For enthusiasts of street art, graffiti, or simply those fascinated by anatomy, this artwork offers a unique fusion of all, making it a valuable addition to any collection.

    $631.00

  • Dissection Of A Black Widow Giclee Print by Nychos

    Nychos Dissection Of A Black Widow Giclee Print by Nychos

    Dissection Of A Black Widow Pop Artwork Limited Edition Giclee Print on Fine Art Paper by Modern Artist Nychos. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 111 Size 20.4x24. This Artwork Is Based On The Mural 'Dissection Of A Black Widow" & Can Be Admired Since 2014 In Hamburg's Gängeviertel. Intersection of Science and Street Pop Art "Dissection of a Black Widow" is a standout piece in the oeuvre of Nychos, a modern artist renowned for his intricate pop artwork and deep roots in street and graffiti art. This limited edition giclée print on fine art paper captures the essence of the original mural imposed in Hamburg's Gängeviertel since 2014. The work, numbered and signed, with only 111 editions, measures 20.4x24 inches and exemplifies the artist's fascination with anatomical dissection in a style that merges biological precision with urban artistry. Nychos's approach to the black widow dissection is both clinical and creative, revealing the layers of anatomy in a style reminiscent of medical textbooks yet transformed through a pop art lens. His use of vibrant colors to illustrate the innards of the black widow against the stark contrast of its dark exterior invites a dialogue between the often-opaque nature of street art and the vivid, transparent qualities of scientific illustration. Technique and Craftsmanship in Nychos's Work The artist's "Dissection of a Black Widow" technique is a meticulous layering of color and form that showcases his deft hand and deep understanding of the subject matter and the medium. The giclée printing process, known for its ability to capture the nuance of the original artwork, perfectly complements Nychos's detailed work, preserving the mural's dynamic range of textures and hues. The transition of "Dissection of a Black Widow" from a large-scale mural to a collectible print represents the fluidity with which Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork can traverse different spaces and contexts. Nychos's art not only graces urban landscapes but also finds a place within the intimate setting of personal collections, bringing the raw energy of the streets into harmony with the cultivated environment of modern art enthusiasts. The black widow, a symbol often associated with danger and charisma, is recontextualized in Nychos's work, becoming a canvas for exploring the complexity of life forms. This piece goes beyond mere representation; it explores the hidden intricacies that lie beneath surfaces, a theme that resonates with the layered nature of graffiti and street art. Legacy of "Dissection of a Black Widow" "Dissection of a Black Widow" is a testament to Nychos's legacy in Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. The limited edition print holds an esteemed position, reflecting the evolution of street art into a form that transcends the boundaries of outdoor spaces and enters the realm of fine art collectibles. Nychos's work, particularly this piece, is a testament to the transformative power of street art and its ongoing dialogue with pop culture and contemporary art movements. "Dissection of a Black Widow" is a visual spectacle and an invitation to delve deeper into the intersections of art, science, and the urban landscape, encouraging a reevaluation of what constitutes modern art in our collective consciousness.

    $298.00

  • Covid No 19 Verte Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

  • Love Life And Death Archival Print by Nychos

    Nychos Love Life And Death Archival Print by Nychos

    Love Life And Death Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on Velvet Cotton Fine Art Paper by Artist Nychos, Street Pop Art Graffiti Legend. 2021 Signed & Numbered Size: 32,5 x 60,9 cm // 12.8 x 24 inch Fine art print by NYCHOS Limited Edition of 111 Velvet Fine Art cotton fiber paper Hand-signed & numbered

    $450.00

  • Nefertiti Archival Print by Nychos

    Nychos Nefertiti Archival Print by Nychos

    Nefertiti Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on Velvet Cotton Fine Art Paper by Artist Nychos, Street Pop Art Graffiti Legend. 2021 Signed & Numbered Fine art print by NYCHOS Limited Edition of 111 Artwork Size 18.5x24 Nychos, a renowned figure in the realms of street art and pop graffiti, presents a mesmerizing portrayal of Nefertiti in this archival pigment fine art print. The artist is globally recognized for his distinctive style, where he often delves into the intricate anatomy of his subjects, blending a keen scientific accuracy with a vibrant, almost surreal aesthetic. This particular piece, titled "Nefertiti," is no exception. With a backdrop of a bold red circle, the artwork unveils the internal anatomy of the ancient Egyptian queen, juxtaposing the magnificence of her external beauty with the intricate maze of her internal physiology. The details, from the network of veins and arteries to the intricate bone structure, are meticulously laid out, capturing the viewer's attention instantly. The use of vivid colors against the dark backdrop further accentuates the details, making it a captivating visual experience. Crafted in 2021, this artwork is a testament to Nychos's unparalleled talent and his unique approach to street art. The print is made using high-quality archival pigment, ensuring longevity and retaining the vibrancy of the colors. Produced on velvet cotton fine art paper, the texture complements the depth and intricacy of the artwork. As a limited edition release, only 111 pieces have been produced, each measuring 18.5 x 24 inches. Every print is signed and numbered by Nychos, guaranteeing its authenticity and making it a sought-after piece for collectors and street art enthusiasts alike. The blend of ancient iconography with contemporary art techniques results in a piece that bridges epochs and challenges the viewer to see beyond the surface.

    $503.00

  • Good To See You Henry Rollins Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY

    Shepard Fairey- OBEY Good To See You Henry Rollins Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY

    Good To See You Henry Rollins 3-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paperby Shepard Fairey Rare Street Art OBEY Pop Artwork Artist. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 250 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY "My good friend Henry Rollins is on his “Good to See You” spoken word tour that kicked off earlier this year. I’ve collaborated with Henry many times. I’m constantly in awe and impressed by him. He is the hardest-working guy I know and stays up on social and political issues. I’m excited that he is on the road again and honored to design his 2022 tour art. The posters are available to purchase on his tour if you see him on the upcoming dates, signed by Henry and me." -Shepard Fairey

    $472.00

  • Pineal Gland Archival Print by Nychos

    Nychos Pineal Gland Archival Print by Nychos

    Pineal Gland Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on Velvet Cotton Fine Art Paper by Artist Nychos, Street Pop Art Graffiti Legend. 2020 Signed & Numbered 18.2x24 Fine art print by NYCHOS Limited Edition of 111 Velvet Fine Art cotton fiber paper Hand-signed & numbered The pineal gland seems to have eye-like functions. It contains structures similar to the photoreceptors of our eyes. The entrance of light has an impact on the gland’s activity, including the hormonal regulation of our sleep and waking cycle. This involves brain wave changes. During meditative states, the pineal gland is similarly active as during nighttime. It helps the mind to enter a more relaxed state. -Nychos

    $450.00

  • Covid No 19 Sarcelle Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

  • Covid No 19 Bleue Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

  • Yogi on Xanax- Black Silkscreen Print by Ben Frost

    Ben Frost Yogi on Xanax- Black Silkscreen Print by Ben Frost

    Yogi on Xanax- Black 7-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite Paper by Ben Frost Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. 2022 Signed & Numbered Ben Frost Yogi on Xanax, 7-color Hand-Pulled Screen Print on Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite, 160 lb Cover 24 x24 in., 61 x 61 cm Edition of 25, signed & numbered by the artist Printed by POP!NK Editions Yogi on Xanax by Ben Frost – Pop Culture Intervention in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Yogi on Xanax is a 2022 limited edition 7-color hand-pulled silkscreen print by Australian-born artist Ben Frost, printed on 160 lb Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite cover paper. Measuring 24 x 24 inches, this silkscreen print was produced in a signed and numbered edition of just 25, crafted under the direction of POP!NK Editions. Known for his subversive blending of pop culture icons with controversial subject matter, Frost delivers a provocative image that fuses the innocence of Yogi Bear with the cold design language of a pharmaceutical Xanax label. This juxtaposition forces a confrontation between humor and critique, childhood nostalgia and chemical dependency, all while maintaining the graphic vibrancy and clean execution that define his studio practice. The piece is bold, glossy, and ironic—designed to trigger recognition and unsettle the viewer simultaneously. Pharmaceutical Satire and Cartoon Familiarity Collide Ben Frost’s work routinely challenges the sanitized narratives of consumer branding and media imagery. In Yogi on Xanax, the use of Yogi Bear—an animated figure associated with carefree antics and childhood television—is purposefully misaligned with the clinical, regulated world of prescription medication. The cheerful cartoon smile and brightly saturated colors stand in contrast to the red-labeled warnings and dosage marks of Xanax packaging. The artwork explores themes of escapism, emotional suppression, and the commercialization of health, suggesting that even the most innocent symbols are not immune to societal pressures. Frost’s treatment of iconography reflects the strategies central to Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where visual language is repurposed to expose hidden truths and cultural contradictions. Printing Technique, Surface Quality, and Material Precision Executed with precision on Mohawk Superfine UltraWhite paper, the 7-color silkscreen process ensures that every layer of ink sits cleanly atop the surface, producing striking contrast and tonal balance. This heavy-weight paper enhances the density of color and preserves the integrity of each line and text detail. The silkscreen technique, a mainstay of pop art production since the era of Andy Warhol, allows Frost to replicate the flat commercial style of packaging design while embedding it with sharp conceptual tension. Each print is signed and hand-numbered, reinforcing its collectibility and placing it within the canon of fine-edition Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. POP!NK Editions’ involvement in the production guarantees a gallery-level standard of finish, ensuring that each print is not only conceptually rich but also technically flawless. Ben Frost’s Cultural Commentary Through Brand Distortion Ben Frost continues to push the boundaries of what pop imagery can convey in a critical, ironic, and visually arresting format. Yogi on Xanax operates on multiple levels—as parody, as product, and as visual disruption. It pulls from the mass media archive and reintroduces familiar icons with new, unsettling associations. This is central to the strategy of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where repetition, appropriation, and recontextualization are not just aesthetic choices but radical acts. By placing a figure like Yogi Bear in the frame of medical necessity and emotional regulation, Frost questions how society assigns meaning and value to images. His art reflects a world where cartoons sell pills and pills sell calm, a world where branding and identity collapse into one unified surface. Yogi on Xanax is not just pop art—it is a sharp and unapologetic reflection of contemporary visual culture.

    $1,500.00

  • Pandemonium Silkscreen Print by TOMO77 x Shepard Fairey- OBEY

    Shepard Fairey- OBEY Pandemonium Silkscreen Print by TOMO77 x Shepard Fairey- OBEY

    Pandemonium Silkscreen Print by TOMO77 x Shepard Fairey- OBEY Hand-Pulled on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork Obey Pop Culture Artist. 2021 Signed by TOMO77 & Shepard Fairey & Numbered Limited Edition of 300 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print "TOMO77 has documented a period marked by isolation and confusion, from the earliest anxious days of the pandemic through more than a year of political and social unrest. Amid this graphic testimony of uncertainty, uproar, and division, TOMO77 leaves us with one question: Where do we want to go from here?" -Shepard Fairey- OBEY. The collaborative work of TOMO77 and Shepard Fairey in the "Pandemonium" silkscreen print profoundly represents the tumultuous period that marked the early 2020s. This limited edition piece, hand-pulled with four colors on cream speckletone fine art paper, stands as a cultural artifact, encapsulating the essence of street pop art and graffiti artwork. Signed by both TOMO77 and Shepard Fairey, the artwork is part of a limited run of 300, each piece numbered, indicating its value and scarcity. The artwork's dimensions, 18x24 inches, provide a substantial canvas for the intricate designs and stark contrasts that have become hallmarks of both artists. TOMO77's contribution to this piece is particularly poignant, as his work often grapples with themes of human behavior, social upheaval, and the influence of capitalism, especially within the context of an immigrant lens. The "Pandemonium" print reflects these themes, addressing the global disarray and introspection during significant societal and political unrest. Shepard Fairey's partnership with TOMO77 on this project enhances the narrative potency of the piece, as Fairey's legacy in street art and activism art adds depth to the print's conceptual framework. Through their combined efforts, "Pandemonium" becomes more than just an artwork; it is a visual question posed to the audience, challenging them to consider the direction of human progress in times of crisis. The print represents the artist's technical prowess and commitment to using art for reflection and potential change.

    $552.00

  • Covid No 19 Juane Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

  • Covid No 19 Rouge Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier

    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

Doctor/Medical/Medicine Graffiti Street Pop Artwork

Artistic Pulse: The Intersection of Healthcare and Street Art

The gritty laneways and towering skyscrapers of urban landscapes serve as the pulsating veins where the lifeblood of street pop art and graffiti artwork thrives. The influence of medicine and healthcare within this vibrant artistic sphere is palpable, as artists use walls as their canvases to delve into subjects traditionally reserved for clinics and textbooks. Often shrouded in anonymity, these creators channel their perspectives on health-related issues, making bold statements in the public realm that resonate with passersby.

Doctor Dax's Artistic Intervention in Public Health

One artist who stands out in the integration of medical motifs into street art is Doctor Dax. Though not a medical practitioner, his work often showcases an intuitive grasp of healthcare's impact on society. The streets become an open gallery where Doctor Dax's art sparks dialogue about wellness, illness, and the healthcare system. His murals may not heal the sick, but they offer a dose of reflection on community health, presenting issues of medical significance with a visual potency that printed words often lack.

Street Art as a Commentary on Medical Narratives

The role of street pop art and graffiti in the discourse on medicine is undeniably significant. These visual narratives capture the essence of public sentiment, sometimes as a tribute to healthcare providers or an indictment of health inequity. The artworks become a barometer for societal well-being, offering a unique take on patients' experiences and the challenges medical professionals face. They also serve as a reminder of the power of art as a communal force, capable of healing divides and opening eyes to the systemic issues plaguing the world of medicine.
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