Drug

3 artworks

  • 8 Ball Vinyl Resin Art Toy by Vandul

    Vandul 8 Ball Vinyl Resin Art Toy by Vandul

    8 Ball Vinyl Resin Art Toy by Vandul Limited Edition Collectible Sculpture Figure Fine Artwork by Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2023 Limited Edition Artwork Size 3x5 New In Box Stamped/Printed Vinyl Resin Fine Art Toy Crack Cocaine Drug Cute Creature Figure Sculpture. Unopened Bag.  8 Ball Vinyl Resin Art Toy by Vandul The 8 Ball Vinyl Resin Art Toy by Vandul is a sharp and satirical collectible sculpture that fuses contemporary vinyl toy culture with graffiti-inspired commentary. Released in 2023, this fine art object embodies a provocative edge through its mix of soft aesthetic cues and hard cultural critique. The piece stands at approximately 3 by 5 inches and arrives new in box, encased in clear plastic, ensuring it remains untouched and preserved in its original state. Included is a die-cut sticker and the iconic orange packaging, stamped with both branding and subversive messages that point to the toy’s roots in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Graffiti Character Meets Designer Toy Form Vandul, known for operating at the intersection of designer toys and subcultural art, continues to refine his language of visual rebellion with this release. The 8 Ball character features an oversized, rounded skull-like head and is rendered in smooth vinyl resin, complete with a painted-on black eye, sunglasses, a lolling tongue, and red kicks reminiscent of streetwear culture. A bowtie and the toy’s permanently cheerful expression contrast directly with its underlying implication—8 Ball as a cracked egg, a veiled nod to substance culture and distorted purity. This piece’s humor is deceptive, and its cuteness masks deeper commentary on consumption, branding, and cultural addiction. The Symbolism Behind the 8 Ball Figure This work cleverly channels the American obsession with both consumer goods and synthetic purity. The egg-shaped 8 Ball wears innocence as a mask while hinting at chaos beneath its shell. The title evokes a double meaning—referencing both pool hall imagery and the street slang for a specific amount of crack cocaine. Vandul uses the clean form of the designer toy as a container for coded language and street symbolism. These contradictions are essential in graffiti-adjacent sculpture, where the material and the message must coexist in tension. The result is a toy that behaves more like a sculptural critique than a child’s collectible, inviting inspection rather than idle play. Vandul’s Role in Contemporary Urban Sculpture Vandul, a street artist with a strong foothold in graffiti design and sculptural pop, has continuously blurred the line between accessible art and disruptive narrative. Based in the United States, his body of work includes stickers, murals, and small-batch vinyl toys that exist within a DIY tradition of urban fine art. The 8 Ball figure is both a continuation and evolution of this ethos—merging fine art production methods like resin casting and silkscreened boxes with mass culture critique. As part of a limited edition, the figure is not only rare but also emblematic of the shifting dialogue between graffiti culture and collectible art. It stands as a physical embodiment of the satire and rebellion that underpins much of modern Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork.

    $300.00

  • Internal Growth Frames Orange Original Acrylic Sculpture by Jenna Morello

    Jenna Morello Internal Growth Frames Orange Original Acrylic Sculpture by Jenna Morello

    Internal Growth Frames- Orange Original Mixed Media Resin & Flower Sculpture Artwork by graffiti Street Artist Jenna Morello Modern Pop Artwork. 2021 Signed One of a Kind Framed Original Art Pill Individually framed Internal Growth pill. The pill is cast with real elements from nature. Measures 5 x 3 3/4 x 2 inches Museum-quality frame, comes signed.

    $299.00

  • PERC 30MG Art Toy by Vandul

    Vandul PERC 30MG Art Toy by Vandul

    PERC 30MG Art Toy by Vandal Limited Edition Vinyl Sculpture Collectible Artwork by Pop Street Artist. 2022 Limited Edition 3D Printed Artwork Size 4x5 No Box in Perfect Condition Exploring the Impact of Vandul's PERC 30MG Art Toy on Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork The PERC 30MG Art Toy by Vandul is a striking addition to the landscape of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, embodying the intersection where urban culture collides with the collectible art toy movement. Vandul, an artist celebrated for contributing to the street art scene, has ventured into three-dimensional art with this limited-edition vinyl sculpture. The PERC 30MG is not merely a toy but a statement piece, a tangible manifestation of Vandul's gritty aesthetic and commentary on modern society. Standing at 4x5 inches, this vinyl sculpture is a compact but powerful artistry. Its design mirrors the iconic and often controversial pill shape, referencing the pharmaceutical influence on contemporary life. Vandul's choice to represent such a provocative subject as an art toy reflects his willingness to push boundaries and confront challenging themes head-on. Vandul's Artistic Expression Through Vinyl Sculpture Crafted with meticulous attention to detail, the PERC 30MG Art Toy highlights Vandul's commitment to quality and skill in bringing street sensibilities into new formats. In creating this piece, 3D printing technology underscores a modern approach to art-making, blending traditional sculptural practices with cutting-edge production methods. This limited edition artwork, with no accompanying box, speaks to street art's raw and unfiltered nature, where the focus is on the artwork rather than on elaborate packaging or presentation. The Cultural Significance of Vandul's PERC 30MG in the Art Toy Community In the collectible toy community, the PERC 30MG emulates the provocative and rebellious spirit that often defines Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork. Vandul's choice to engage with the art toy medium indicates a broader trend among street artists to explore commercial avenues without compromising the integrity of their message. As a limited edition piece, the PERC 30MG is a work of art and a collector's item sought after for its aesthetic and rarity. The Role of PERC 30MG in Contemporary Art Discourse The PERC 30MG Art Toy catalyzes discourse on the relationship between art, commerce, and societal issues. Vandul's work reflects the times, a snapshot of the current socio-economic climate filtered through the lens of street art. In perfect condition, this piece invites viewers to contemplate the influence of pharmaceuticals and their omnipresent role in our lives, all within the context of a seemingly playful and innocuous object. In sum, the PERC 30MG Art Toy by Vandul is a powerful addition to the world of Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork, challenging perceptions and offering a fresh perspective on the potential of art toys as vehicles for cultural commentary. Vandul's work resonates with a growing audience that seeks art that is both thought-provoking and accessible, marking a significant moment in the evolution of street art.

    $183.00

Drug Graffiti Street Pop Art

Drugs in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

The presence of drugs as a subject in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork has long functioned as a powerful cultural mirror reflecting society’s fascination, fear, rebellion, and addiction. From the early days of underground zines and subway graffiti to the polished editions found in pop art galleries today, references to drugs appear both overtly and symbolically. Artists use imagery related to pills, joints, syringes, tabs, powder, and pills not simply to glorify or condemn, but to interrogate deeper themes of escapism, social decay, counterculture, and altered consciousness. The chaotic relationship between drugs and modern life is encoded in the iconography of urban visual art where it serves as both an artistic medium and subject matter. Whether painted on a train car or framed in a fine art print run, the visual language of drugs serves as a lens through which reality is distorted and reexamined.

Psychedelia and Synthetic Expression

The impact of substances like LSD, MDMA, and psilocybin can be seen in the vibrant, psychedelic aesthetics that are central to many Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork pieces. Fluid linework, hallucinatory characters, and overstimulated palettes reference the warped realities experienced during drug use. The graphic interpretations of these altered states serve to visually manifest the feelings of euphoria, detachment, or fragmentation that define many chemical journeys. Artists such as Buff Monster and Ron English have used stylized characters and acid-toned color schemes to invoke the sense of fantasy and disarray associated with drug-fueled perception. These visuals are not accidental—they are engineered to evoke chemical influence, a warped mirror of the mental environments that drugs can create. In this way, the work does not simply depict drugs but functions as a surrogate experience of their effects.

Critique and Commodification

Drugs are also used within the artform to critique the systems that both criminalize and commodify them. Imagery of prescription bottles with exaggerated branding, corporate logos repurposed into pill labels, and characters addicted to cartoonish substances reflect a critique of pharmaceutical and capitalist excess. The contrast between cartoon humor and darker subject matter is a recurring motif used to make statements about addiction, exploitation, and commodified highs. This type of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork is especially potent because it subverts familiar branding, repackaging everyday drug culture with irony and visual punch. It blurs the lines between legal and illegal, medical and recreational, pointing to the hypocrisy and complexity surrounding drug policy and consumer habits.

Symbols of Identity and Survival

For some artists, drugs are not just a concept but a lived reality embedded in community experience. In marginalized neighborhoods, graffiti frequently becomes a way to document survival, coded through tags, slang, and visual metaphors. Whether referencing crack pipes, mushrooms, pills, or joints, the use of drug symbols is often deeply autobiographical. It represents coping, struggle, and defiance in the face of socio-economic barriers. The streets themselves often carry these stories long before galleries do. When those same symbols are transferred onto silkscreen prints, vinyl figures, or gallery canvases, they carry the weight of their origins. The transition from wall to white cube does not erase the intensity of the message; it amplifies it for new audiences while retaining its raw foundation. In this way, drugs as depicted in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork become tools for storytelling, resistance, satire, and identity in a modern visual language rooted in lived truth.

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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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