Flowers & Plants

5 artworks

  • The Guardian Soul Rider Sculpture by Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat

    Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat The Guardian Soul Rider Sculpture by Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat

    Soul Rider The Guardian Limited Edition Polyresin Sculpture Artwork by Legendary Fine Art Artist Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat. 2022 Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 10x16 “SOUL RIDER - THE GUARDIAN”the latest polyresin sculpture by Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat. A limited edition of 100 pieces, they all come numbered with COA (Certificate of Authenticity) in a wooden box. Box is sealed & never opened, use caution when opening it as the artwork is delicate. Soul Rider The Guardian by Dulk: Symbolic Journey in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Soul Rider The Guardian is a 2022 limited edition polyresin sculpture created by Spanish fine artist and street art icon Antonio Segura Donat, known professionally as Dulk. Measuring 10 x 16 inches and released in an edition of 100 pieces, each sculpture arrives in a laser-etched wooden box with a certificate of authenticity. This piece continues Dulk’s tradition of blending animal mythology, surreal landscapes, and layered symbolism into tangible objects that echo the larger murals and installations that have defined his role in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The sculpture features a large blue parrot with elaborate feather detailing, perched atop a cactus base. Its back carries a mysterious rider—a humanoid rabbit figure adorned in ceremonial robes, antlers, and a tribal mask. The rider holds a staff topped with a sunflower bearing a purple heart, while a small bear-like character hugs the base. The parrot’s eyes are wide and expressive, with subtle asymmetry that gives it an alert, almost sentient presence. Its design draws from classical mythologies while presenting a contemporary visual language saturated with clean color palettes and stylized geometry. Guardianship, Movement, and Memory in Sculptural Form Soul Rider The Guardian reflects Dulk’s continued exploration of environmentalism, spiritual journeying, and character symbolism. The idea of a guardian is central to the sculpture’s identity—suggesting a role of protection, vigilance, and the weight of guiding something sacred. The rider and the parrot form a single traveling entity, echoing themes of migration and mythic pilgrimage. This duality of creature and guide, mount and messenger, encapsulates Dulk’s interest in harmony between beings and the ecosystems they represent. The parrot is a carrier of color and voice, often associated with communication and mimicry, but here it becomes a grounded protector. The rabbit rider, masked and antlered, represents ritual, mystery, and cultural synthesis. These archetypes merge to create a visual allegory that feels both ancient and speculative. The combination of flora and fauna, organic and fabricated forms, serves as a metaphor for our entangled relationship with nature and technology. It is this complexity that places Dulk’s work firmly within the expanding world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Dulk’s Signature Language and Collector-Scale Execution The sculpture’s design is true to Dulk’s larger visual universe—where animals become spiritual avatars, and objects carry symbolic meaning. The careful execution in polyresin allows for high fidelity in textures and forms. The stylized wings, spiraled horns, patterned garments, and tiny floral elements are all sculpted with precision, reflecting Dulk’s background in both graphic illustration and muralism. Every piece of the sculpture contributes to the narrative, encouraging viewers to see the work not just as a character, but as a scene. The boxed presentation and limited run heighten its status as a fine art collectible, though it remains grounded in street-level ideology—accessible, emotional, and community-aware. This is not a piece of static decoration, but a three-dimensional story in pause. As with Dulk’s murals, the colors are vivid but harmonious, designed to be both emotionally charged and visually soothing. Each choice of hue, pose, and object placement reinforces a sense of journey, fragility, and resilience. Street Pop Mythology and the Contemporary Art Object Antonio Segura Donat, born in Spain, continues to define and evolve the visual and conceptual space of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork through sculptural releases like Soul Rider The Guardian. The artwork serves as a physical embodiment of his narrative philosophy: stories told through animal forms, infused with ecological reverence and mythic tone. While his murals scale buildings and public spaces, this sculpture brings that monumental energy into a personal format, maintaining the integrity and intention of his street-based work. Soul Rider The Guardian is a totem of imagination and empathy, built for collectors who seek meaning beyond the surface. It honors the idea that guardianship is not about dominance, but about care, presence, and shared protection. With its careful balance of form, color, and emotion, the sculpture stands as both a sacred object and a call to remember the quiet power of responsibility. Dulk continues to remind the world that fantasy, when sculpted with sincerity, can reveal deeper truths about how we live, what we value, and who we choose to follow.

    $1,300.00

  • Digital Colibri Red Gold Serigraph Print by Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas

    Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas Digital Colibri Red Gold Serigraph Print by Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas

    Digital Colibri- Red/Gold Limited Edition Hand Pulled 3-Color Serigraph Print on Fine Art Paper by Ernesto Yerena Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2015 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 175 Artwork Size10x8 Signed limited edition serigraph titled Dignity Colibri, by well-listed American social activist and artist Ernesto Yerena Montejano. The image depicts a stylized red, orange and gold graphic hummingbird raising its beak to a tiny rose against a white and gold backdrop. Print is numbered 38 in an edition of 175 and signed by the artist in pencil to the lower margin. The print is mounted behind gold-tone and white double-mat, under glass in a beveled composite black frame. Yerena’s work is fueled by his cross-national background, having been brought up in the small farm town of El Centro, California, which borders both America and Mexico. He uses his work to bring political concerns to light, creating images of cultural and political icons as well as everyday people. Yerena is the founder and curator of the Alto Arizona Art campaign (2010) as well as a founding member of the We Are Human campaign (2009). He has collaborated with many artists, including Shepard Fairey.

    $323.00

  • Magnolia Giclee Print by Alex Kirzhner

    Alex Kirzhner Magnolia Giclee Print by Alex Kirzhner

    Magnolia Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on 300gsm Cold Press Watercolor Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Alex Kirzhner.

    $134.00

  • Sale -15% The Welcomer Soul Rider Sculpture by Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat

    Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat The Welcomer Soul Rider Sculpture by Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat

    Soul Rider The Welcomer Limited Edition Polyresin Sculpture Artwork by Legendary Fine Art Artist Dulk- Antonio Segura Donat. 2023 Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size Painted cast resin 14 5/8 × 9 × 9 in | 37.1 × 22.9 × 22.9 cm  A limited edition of 100 pieces, they all come numbered with COA (Certificate of Authenticity) in a wooden box. New in Box. The Welcomer Soul Rider by Dulk: Whimsy and Symbolism in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork The Welcomer Soul Rider is a surreal polyresin sculpture created by Antonio Segura Donat, the Spanish fine art and street pop artist known globally as Dulk. Part of his Soul Rider series, this piece channels Dulk’s signature mythology through playful forms and symbolic characters rooted in fantasy, ecology, and layered storytelling. Perched atop a polka-dotted mushroom pedestal, a candy-colored creature combining features of a rabbit, unicorn, and fantasy familiar stands poised, while another character, masked and horned, rides upon its back with a trumpet raised in mid-call. This imaginative and theatrical composition fuses theatricality and allegory in a format that merges narrative depth with toy-like precision, making it a striking example of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork in three-dimensional form. The main figure wears a twisted unicorn horn, oversized spiraled eyes, and a jester-like collar, blending animal innocence with ceremonial significance. Its expression is frozen in blissful confusion, a hallmark of Dulk’s emotional ambiguity. Its pink body contrasts with the cool tones of the mushroom base, which includes hidden characters and details such as a small caterpillar clinging to its edge. The rear rider, with elongated ears and acorn-shaped headwear, wears a black mask and raises a musical instrument as if announcing an arrival. This dynamic scene evokes ritual, procession, and a sense of surreal celebration, offering a playful yet haunting narrative about identity, transformation, and observation. Symbolic Storytelling and Playful Dissonance in Dulk’s Visual World Dulk’s work often explores duality: light and shadow, celebration and extinction, innocence and decay. In The Welcomer Soul Rider, the characters feel as if summoned from a forgotten folklore or alternate realm, their features exaggerated yet precise. The pastel palette softens their eccentricity, giving them an approachable presence while maintaining mystery. The visual language combines influences from street art, classic fairytales, and ecological allegory. Like many of Dulk’s works, this sculpture poses more questions than it answers, inviting viewers to decipher its meanings through emotion and imagination. The mushroom base plays an important role as a symbol of regeneration and hidden ecosystems. It functions as both throne and stage. The oversized lock at the bottom of the mushroom base suggests something magical or secret beneath the surface. Dulk often uses such visual cues to suggest that there is more to the world than meets the eye. The mask worn by the trumpet bearer hints at themes of identity and voice, possibly symbolizing guardianship, ceremony, or disguise. These objects and forms speak to the layered complexity often found in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where surface whimsy conceals subtextual urgency. Dulk’s Role in Sculptural Storytelling within Street Pop Art Antonio Segura Donat has emerged as a defining voice in the contemporary scene, merging his roots in muralism with a sculptural practice that transforms flat wall narratives into tangible objects. The Welcomer Soul Rider exemplifies how his storytelling transcends media, maintaining the emotional clarity and visual humor of his murals while exploring texture, volume, and space. The piece feels like a paused scene in an unwritten fable, both frozen in time and full of momentum. The sculpture aligns with the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork by maintaining accessibility and visual immediacy while challenging conventions of fine art through character design, symbolic layering, and satirical edge. Dulk’s aesthetic borrows from animated films, street iconography, and folklore, resulting in a style that is deeply personal yet universally engaging. His work encourages reflection on environmentalism, empathy, and the fantastical narratives we carry within. The Welcomer Soul Rider as Collectible Myth and Emotional Totem The Welcomer Soul Rider is more than decorative sculpture—it functions as an emotional totem, a modern myth encased in resin. Dulk’s attention to posture, color, and prop placement ensures that the viewer is engaged from every angle, discovering new meanings and hidden figures with each turn. This piece joins the growing trend of character-based fine art sculptures that draw influence from the street while evolving into gallery-caliber works. Whether experienced as a standalone figure or part of the wider Soul Rider series, The Welcomer carries a distinct voice. It calls softly but persistently, echoing Dulk’s artistic message: protect imagination, embrace duality, and celebrate those who carry stories through the chaos of our modern world. Through characters that are strange yet familiar, Dulk builds a universe that speaks fluently in the language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork while remaining unmistakably his own.

    $1,300.00 $1,100.00

  • Swept Away Archival Print by Josh Keyes

    Josh Keyes Swept Away Archival Print by Josh Keyes

    Swept Away Archival Print by Josh Keyes Limited Edition on MEDIUM Pop Graffiti Street Art Artist Modern Artwork. 2023 COA & Print Limited Edition of 230 Artwork Size 10x8 Archival Pigment Fine Art pf Giant Wave and Geese on Ocean "Swept Away," an archival print by renowned artist Josh Keyes, represents a captivating fusion of street art and modern artwork, imbued with a signature pop art flair. This limited-edition piece, released in 2023, seamlessly transcends the boundaries of conventional art, infusing a tangible energy and profound depth into the dynamic street art scene. Masterfully executed, Keyes’ artwork offers a bold commentary on our contemporary landscape through the powerful image of a giant wave and geese soaring over the ocean. Limited to a concise run of 230, each 10x8 archival pigment fine art print is meticulously signed and numbered by Keyes himself. The rarity of this limited edition makes it a highly desirable acquisition for avid art collectors, street art enthusiasts, and admirers of Keyes' evocative style. The striking depiction of the ocean and its majestic yet destructive waves, overlaid with the serene grace of flying geese, engages audiences with its remarkable contrast and harmonious coexistence of nature's elements. This balance between chaos and tranquility, inherent in Keyes' work, resonates strongly with the spirit of street art, emphasizing its raw, unfiltered, and authentic character. Infused with the vivid color palette and sharp, distinctive lines typical of graffiti art, "Swept Away" serves as a potent reminder of Keyes' roots in the urban art scene. This archival print brings the vibrant energy of street art into the realm of fine art, with an archival quality that ensures the vibrancy and integrity of the print are preserved for generations. The compelling narrative, captivating visuals, and profound cultural commentary embedded within "Sweep Away" epitomize the essence of modern artwork. This piece encapsulates Keyes' unparalleled ability to capture and express the zeitgeist of our times, making it not only a beautiful addition to any art collection but also an insightful reflection of contemporary society.

    $147.00

Flower Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork
Flowers and plants have been central motifs in art for centuries, and their interpretation in Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork is no exception. As subjects, they carry a wealth of symbolism and have been used to communicate a broad spectrum of ideas, from the transient nature of beauty to the endurance of growth. In the context of pop art, these natural elements were often rendered in a style that was antithetical to their organic origins, playing into the movement's fascination with commercialization and the banality of mass-produced goods. Artists like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein brought flowers and plants into the pop art conversation, turning them into repetitive, almost mechanical prints, challenging traditional aesthetics and the art world's elitism.

Floral Imagery in Pop Art

Pop art was known for embracing ordinary objects and its commentary on consumerism. Flowers in this genre were stripped of their individuality and reproduced en masse, much like the commodities they were meant to represent. This treatment of floral subjects underscored the pop art movement's preoccupation with the ideas of standardization and commodification.

Graffiti Art and Botanical Forms

In contrast to the controlled and commercialized depictions in pop art, graffiti artists use flowers and plants to bring a sense of the spontaneous and the organic into urban environments. These artists often choose floral subjects to oppose their harsh concrete canvases directly. The growth of a flower through a crack in the sidewalk is a powerful metaphor for the resilience of nature and is a frequent theme in street art, symbolizing hope and the reclaiming of space by natural beauty.

Street Art's Natural Aesthetic

Street artists have adopted and adapted the flower symbol as a personal tag or signature. The diversity of styles and interpretations among artists is vast, with some using photorealistic depictions of plants to criticize environmental issues. In contrast, others employ a more abstract or stylized approach to convey different messages or emotions. The public nature of street art means these works are not confined to galleries or private collections but are instead part of the everyday landscape, accessible to all.

Symbiosis of Urban and Natural

Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork often create a symbiosis between the urban environment and the natural world. Flowers and plants depicted in these genres can transform dull or overlooked spaces into areas of interest and beauty. They also serve as a reminder of the natural world amid urban sprawl, offering a moment of reflection for the viewer.

Evolution of Botanical Motifs

The evolution of botanical motifs in street art and pop art reflects broader changes in societal attitudes toward the environment and urban living. As cities become more aware of the importance of green spaces, using plant imagery in street art becomes a visual representation of this shift in consciousness. It is a way for artists to participate in and sometimes lead the conversation on ecological and urban renewal.

Impact on Public Perception

The impact of these natural motifs on public perception and urban aesthetics cannot be overstated. Flowers and plants in street and pop art act not only as decoration but as integral parts of urban communities, shaping the identities of neighborhoods and influencing how residents and visitors interact with their environment.

Artistic Techniques and Media

The techniques and media used to depict these natural forms vary widely, from spray paint to stencils and from paste-ups to large-scale murals. Each method brings a different quality to the plant imagery and can alter its perception. Whether through a stencil's bold, solid colors or the intricate lines of freehand spray paint, the depiction of flowers and plants in street art is as diverse as the artists themselves.

Cultural and Social Significance

Culturally, incorporating flowers and plants into street and pop art has significant social implications. It can be a tool for community engagement, brightening up neglected areas, or making powerful statements about social and environmental issues. This art form is uniquely positioned to engage with the public on a grassroots level, often sparking discussions and inspiring community-driven initiatives.

Preservation and Documentation

While street art is inherently ephemeral, there has been a movement towards preserving and documenting these works. Photographs and books cataloging street art have become increasingly popular, ensuring that the temporary blooms on city walls are recorded and remembered.

Flowers & Plants in Graffiti Pop Art

In sum, flowers and plants as subjects in Street Pop Art and graffiti Artwork bridge the urban landscape and the natural world. They offer a visual respite from the concrete jungle and a reminder of the persistent force of nature. These motifs continue to evolve, capturing the imagination of artists and audiences alike and solidifying their place in the annals of contemporary art history.
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