Drawing Original Artwork
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Saber Gold Foil Patch Original Marker Drawing by Saber
Gold Foil Patch Original Marker Drawing by Saber on Antiqued Raw Fine Art Paper Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2023 Signed Original Marker & Gold Foil Drawing Size 5x6
$168.00
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Nicole Gustafsson Gustav Original Drawing by Nicole Gustafsson
Gustav Original Ink Hand Mini Drawing on Fine Art Paper by modern trending street art artist Nicole Gustafsson. 2013 Signed Original Drawing 5x5
$256.00
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Nicole Gustafsson Haru Original Drawing by Nicole Gustafsson
Haru Original Ink Hand Mini Drawing on Fine Art Paper by modern trending street art artist Nicole Gustafsson. 2012 Signed Original Drawing 5x5
$256.00
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Ronnie Cutrone Woody Original Marker Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone
Woody Original Magic Marker Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone on Card Stock Paper Modern Street Pop Artwork. 1988 Signed Dated Original Magic Marker Drawing Size 5x7 Woody Woodpecker Original Hand Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone. Comes With COA. Ronnie Cutrone, a prominent figure in the contemporary art movement, notably gifted the world with his renditions of popular culture icons. Among these masterpieces is his 1988 original magic marker drawing of Woody Woodpecker, a character synonymous with animated brilliance. Crafted meticulously on card stock paper, this piece vividly captures the essence of Woody with the distinctive style that Cutrone was celebrated for. What makes this drawing exceptionally unique is its origin in the heart of the modern street and pop art scene, where Cutrone's reputation was firmly rooted. Woody Woodpecker, with his iconic laughter and mischievous antics, becomes a perfect muse for Cutrone's exploration into the intersection of popular culture and street art. Measuring at an intimate size of 5x7, every stroke and shade of the marker reflects Cutrone's dedication to detailing and his mastery of expressing dynamism through minimalism. The bold contrasts, the playful aura, and the unmissable signature of Cutrone, dated '88, mark this piece as a testament to the era's artistic evolution. For collectors and art enthusiasts, the inclusion of a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) further elevates the drawing's significance, ensuring its authenticity and value. It's a stark reminder of when pop culture permeated street walls, galleries, and the hearts of many, through the hands of artists like Ronnie Cutrone. This piece, both in its subject and execution, stands as an embodiment of an era where animated characters were not just for entertainment but also a powerful medium of artistic expression.
$1,089.00 $926.00
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Nicole Gustafsson Rolph Original Drawing by Nicole Gustafsson
Rolph Original Ink Hand Mini Drawing on Fine Art Paper by modern trending street art artist Nicole Gustafsson. 2014 Signed Original Drawing 5x5
$256.00
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Nicole Gustafsson Skully Original Drawing by Nicole Gustafsson
Skully Original Ink Hand Mini Drawing on Fine Art Paper by modern trending street art artist Nicole Gustafsson. 2013 Signed Original Drawing 5x5
$256.00
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RAE BK Leppard Shirt Original Mixed Media Drawing by RAE BK
Leppard Shirt Original Mixed Media Drawing by RAE BK on Cardstock Paper Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2022 Signed Original Markers & Permanent Markers, Graphite & Colored Pencils, Ink, Mixed Media Drawing Size 5x8 Leppard Shirt by RAE BK – Fragmented Form and Emotional Texture in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Leppard Shirt is a 2022 original mixed media drawing by Brooklyn-based artist RAE BK, executed on 5 x 8 inch cardstock using markers, permanent markers, graphite, colored pencils, and ink, along with additional collage-like material accents. This one-of-a-kind piece showcases RAE BK’s spontaneous, layered, and emotionally coded visual language. Dominated by a bold abstract figure drawn in thick black linework with uneven features, the composition plays with portraiture in an intentionally fractured and expressive way. Facial elements are repeated, distorted, or echoed, while the shirt’s spotted pattern—a nod to the title—is rendered in blotched marks that drift between representation and symbolic texture. This work exists as both a drawing and an artifact, operating in the aesthetic chaos that defines Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Expressionist Energy in Character and Surface RAE BK’s figures are never clean or symmetrical—they are built from scratch, corrected in real-time, and imbued with raw, unfiltered emotion. In Leppard Shirt, the central face feels unstable, yet confident in its presence. The oversized nose, simplified eyes, and curved mouth are layered over washes of smudged material, creating a portrait that feels emotional rather than literal. The repetition of the face motif in miniature—like echoes or iterations—suggests memory or commentary. The artwork does not offer a resolved figure but rather a psychological imprint, drawn with urgency and spontaneity. This sense of emotional immediacy is what places RAE BK’s character work firmly within the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where lines are as much about rhythm and response as they are about control. Collage Elements and Material Disruption The presence of mixed materials—including glitter, adhered objects, and what appears to be a barcode label—transforms the surface into a textural conversation between image and object. The artist uses the tools of the street—found fragments, improvised layers, raw media—and compresses them into a work on paper that feels sculptural and alive. These tactile additions don’t just decorate the page—they rupture it. They serve as interruption, symbol, and critique all at once. Glitter becomes a distortion. Tape becomes a gesture. The result is a drawing that functions like a wall paste-up or found tag—a message delivered in parts, open to interpretation but packed with presence. The layering and mark-making fuse into a visual field of controlled chaos, echoing the layered reality of urban experience and artistic survival. RAE BK and the Language of Urban Artifact RAE BK’s Leppard Shirt is a miniature yet complete embodiment of his larger practice—an intuitive blend of emotional abstraction, coded symbols, and reclaimed visual language. The piece doesn’t ask to be understood in a linear way. It exists as a document of feeling, a collision of internal narrative and found reality. His approach embraces imperfection, trusting the materials and their placement to speak louder than polished composition. As part of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this drawing is a reminder that small-scale work can carry the same intensity and commentary as a mural or installation. RAE BK continues to create not from a need for explanation but from a place of urgency, rhythm, and resistance—giving paper, like city walls, the power to carry voices that refuse to be ignored.
$575.00
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Atomik Hungry Eyes Original Pen Pencil Paint Drawing by Atomik
Hungry Eyes Original Pen Pencil Paint Drawing by Atomik Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2025 Signed Original Ink Paint Pencil Graphite on Paper Drawing Size 5x8 of the Famous Miami Florida Atomik Orange. Hungry Eyes Original Drawing by Atomik: A Raw Expression of Graffiti Culture in Street Pop Art The 2025 piece titled Hungry Eyes by Miami-based graffiti artist Atomik is a potent example of raw Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork captured in traditional media. Known globally for his animated orange character, Atomik channels his origins from the streets of Florida into this expressive 5x8 inch work executed in pen, pencil, ink, and white paint on paper. The drawing preserves the energetic curves, exaggerated facial features, and strong iconography that define his visual language, yet it diverges by focusing on depth, texture, and mood rather than public wall space or train cars. This signed original holds particular weight because it brings Atomik’s explosive style into a more intimate and tactile dimension, highlighting the same mischievous gaze and stylized emotion that viewers typically encounter on a city wall or boxcar. The Miami Influence and the Evolution of Atomik’s Orange Atomik, born and based in Miami, Florida, has been a key figure in the visual evolution of graffiti across the southeastern United States. His signature orange character was born out of a tribute to a lost local landmark—the Miami Orange Bowl—and has since morphed into a universal symbol of urban rebellion, humor, and resilience. Hungry Eyes strips down that icon into its most fundamental parts. Drawn with ballpoint pen, graphite, and accented with sharp white strokes, this piece introduces nuance and technique often overlooked in outdoor works. Swirls and crosshatch marks surround and define the facial contours, merging classical drawing skills with street sensibility. The background of kraft-tone paper gives the composition a raw, unpolished energy, consistent with the artist’s handstyle and sense of immediacy. Even in this format, the image demands attention as if it were wheatpasted across a city block. Street Pop Art Translated to Fine Drawing While Atomik’s graffiti legacy is built upon bright enamel hues and fatcap spray lines across highly visible surfaces, Hungry Eyes functions as an alternate lens into the graffiti psyche—quiet, detailed, and full of coded visual emotion. The angular ink strokes channel years of tagging and can control, while the whimsical circular gradients embedded in the eyes mimic bubble letters and aerosol flares. The use of hand-drawn highlights instead of reflective gloss draws from a comic-book aesthetic while simultaneously staying grounded in graffiti's DIY tradition. This drawing proves that Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork can exist with just as much presence and weight on paper as it does on steel or concrete. Signature and Collectibility in Contemporary Street Art The reverse of the artwork is inscribed in pencil with the artist’s signature, a stylized flourish of the name Atomik and the date 25. This mark authenticates the piece not only in terms of authorship but also as a deliberate object within the continuum of street artist editions and originals. Collectors and fans of graffiti culture recognize works like Hungry Eyes as evidence that street artists are not limited to spray paint and murals. Atomik’s ability to transfer his identity onto fine art media makes this piece a collector-worthy addition for any serious archive of modern graffiti or pop-inspired street visuals. The drawing stands as a reminder that graffiti is not only about location or defiance—it is about mark-making, identity, and the ability to repurpose commercial and personal symbols into resonant visual statements.
$300.00