Food & Eating

2 artworks

  • Enamored Die-Cut Wood- Pink Mixed Media Print by Buff Monster

    Buff Monster Enamored Die-Cut Wood- Pink Mixed Media Print by Buff Monster

    Enamored Die-Cut Wood- Pink Limited Multiple on Laser Cut Wood Panel ready to hang by Buff Monster Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 45 Pink Colorway Artwork Size 14.5 x 13.5 inches (37 x 34 cm) "I've wanted to do a silkscreened die-cut wood print for years! Finally, I have done it! They are all painted by me, too; the light pink background and the black on the sides have all been painted by me. The colors on a silkscreen edition are always much brighter." -Buff Monster Buff Monster, a New York-based street artist renowned for his vibrant and whimsical work in modern pop art and graffiti, presents "Enamored Die-Cut Wood- Pink." This limited edition artwork, part of a series of 45, is a testament to Buff Monster's commitment to innovation and craftsmanship in street pop art. Each piece, sized 14.5 x 13.5 inches, is meticulously crafted on laser-cut wood panels, primed for display without additional framing. The artwork features Buff Monster's signature motif: the melting Mister Melty character, often associated with joy, love, and the steadfast passage of time. The character's singular eye and the heart motif are done in a striking pink colorway, a hue recurrent in Buff Monster's work, symbolizing optimism and vitality. This particular edition is further enhanced by Buff Monster's hand, with the light pink background and the black sides personally painted by the artist, adding a layer of intimacy and authenticity to each print. As with traditional silkscreen prints, "Enamored Die-Cut Wood- Pink" colors are vivid and saturated, displaying Buff Monster's preference for bright, eye-catching palettes that bring his characters to life. The die-cut wood medium adds a sculptural dimension to the piece, offering a tactile experience that differs from two-dimensional prints. This multi-dimensional quality reflects the dynamism of street pop art, which often interacts with its environment unexpectedly. Buff Monster's creation is more than a mere decorative piece; it's a slice of street culture, a manifestation of the artist's influences drawn from Japanese culture, classic graffiti, and American cartoon aesthetics. The "Enamored Die-Cut Wood- Pink" edition represents a marriage of these inspirations, encapsulating the playful and irreverent spirit that defines Buff Monster's artistic practice and the broader street pop art movement. This work is a colorful ode to the melting wonders of life, love, and the enduring power of art to evoke emotion and provoke thought.

    $1,283.00

  • Happy 3D Die-Cut Wood UV Archival Print by Buff Monster

    Buff Monster Happy 3D Die-Cut Wood UV Archival Print by Buff Monster

    Happy 3D Die-Cut Wood UV Archival Print on Laser Cut Wood Panel ready to hang by Buff Monster Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2020 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 205 Happy 3D UV Colorway Artwork Size 14.5 x 13.5 inches (37 x 34 cm) "I painted a similar (and smaller) painting on wood for my show last year, and it sold immediately. So I've redrawn the line work for this new print, which measures approximately 14.5" x 13.5". The art is UV printed on wood, the sides are painted by hand, and the back is signed and numbered.." -Buff Monster. Happy 3D by Buff Monster: Playful Psychotropia in Laser-Cut Form Happy 3D is a standout die-cut wood UV archival print created by the New York-based artist Buff Monster in 2020. This hand-finished limited edition of 205 pieces measures approximately 14.5 x 13.5 inches and features his signature aesthetic: one-eyed monsters dripping with joy, eccentricity, and visual sugar overload. Laser-cut into a custom silhouette and UV printed on wood, the piece fuses high-gloss production with raw material texture. The surfaces are inked with a 3D anaglyph color palette of red and blue hues, lending an electric illusion of motion and dimension. Each print is signed and numbered on the back, with hand-painted edges adding a personal and tactile layer to the fabrication. The finished piece is ready to hang, fusing collectible art toy sensibilities with gallery-ready Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork presentation. Buff Monster and the Visual Language of Joy Buff Monster, born in the United States as Herschel Baltrotsky, is widely known for his candy-coated world filled with melting eyeballs, ice cream monsters, and playful cosmic abstractions. Emerging from the Los Angeles street art scene and later relocating to New York City, he became a dominant force in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. His work regularly blends Japanese pop culture, graffiti influences, punk music, and 1980s aesthetics into pieces that celebrate color, texture, and exaggerated emotion. Happy 3D builds on these themes with its hallucinogenic palette and glossy finish, continuing Buff Monster’s exploration of tactile forms and dimensional storytelling. With a career rooted in murals, stickers, and collectible vinyl figures, his shift to wood panels and UV technology shows his embrace of new formats while maintaining the irreverent visual DNA of street culture. Materiality, Technique, and Street Pop Identity Happy 3D is not a traditional flat print—it is a sculptural expression of digital and manual craftsmanship. The UV archival process enables full-color printing with vibrant precision directly onto wood, giving the illustration a textured permanence. Laser cutting gives the outline a dynamic silhouette, enhancing the monster’s bulbous shape and playful presence. Buff Monster’s choice to hand-paint the edges affirms the artist’s commitment to the handmade within a technologically assisted process. These material decisions speak to the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where production methods are as critical as imagery. Here, the cheerful grotesqueness of the subject—a single eye creature made of cloudlike ooze—becomes more than character design. It becomes a tactile object, an emblem of visual fantasy grounded in punk DIY traditions. A Collectible of Controlled Chaos Limited to 205 editions, Happy 3D is part sculpture, part print, and part wall-mounted artifact. It blends humor and horror with contemporary pop execution. The subject matter evokes Buff Monster’s recurring themes of ephemeral delight and surreal emotion. Its eye gazes directly outward, commanding attention, while its melting body suggests instability beneath the surface charm. This piece sits comfortably between a street art relic and a collectible design object. It captures the bold optimism and visual indulgence at the heart of Buff Monster’s practice, proving that Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork continues to evolve with new tools and formats without losing its loud, weird, and joyful core.

    $951.00

Food & Eating Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

Culinary Motifs in Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork

Food and eating, universal experiences intrinsic to human existence, have long served as rich subjects for artists, capturing their times' social and cultural ethos. In the domains of Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork, these motifs take on vibrant new life, reflecting the every day and the celebratory through bold colors, exaggerated forms, and the inherent commentary of the art forms. This artistic depiction of food not only tantalizes the senses but also symbolizes various aspects of culture, economy, and social dynamics. Food iconography in Street Pop Art is often amplified to hyperbolic proportions, mirroring contemporary society's consumerist culture and mass production of edibles. Here, artists may employ bright, attention-grabbing palettes and large-scale representations to mimic the overload of sensory information in advertising and media. Graffiti art, traditionally rebellious and provocative, can transform food into a symbol of societal consumption or a tool of critique, addressing issues like fast food culture, global hunger, or the commodification of natural resources. As Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork often operate in public spaces, depicting food and eating in these genres also directly engages with the community. These works can become interaction points, where the familiar subject of food invites viewers to engage with the art. These eliciting reactions range from hunger to humor to reflection on their eating habits and food sources.

Artistic Representation of Food in Urban Landscapes

Food-related graffiti becomes part of the city's visual and cultural fabric in urban landscapes, where the art of the street is as integral to the environment as the buildings and the bustling crowds. Artists might take a ubiquitous element of urban dining—like a slice of pizza or a hot dog—and elevate it to a symbolic status, encapsulating the essence of a city’s food scene. These depictions can become so iconic that they not only represent culinary preferences but also signify the identity of the place itself. The versatility of food as a subject allows artists to traverse from the literal to the symbolic, using it to communicate messages about consumption, waste, and the human condition. In some instances, food in Graffiti Artwork serves as a poignant reminder of the disparities in wealth and access to resources, with lavish food spreads painted in areas of poverty as a stark visual contrast to the lived reality of those who pass by. Moreover, the interactive nature of Street Pop Art means that food-related works are not just seen but can be used to engage the public in dialogue. These pieces can become backdrops for social gatherings, stages for performance art, or canvases for community participation, where the art evolves with the input of its audience.

Impact and Evolution of Food-Themed Artistry on the Streets

The impact of food-themed Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork is multi-layered, resonating with the observer on a personal and societal level. An individual may see a mural of a fruit-laden table and recall family gatherings. At the same time, another might interpret it as a commentary on agricultural bounty or a subtle critique of consumer excess. Such is the power of food in art—it speaks an intimate and universal language, personal and public. As Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork continue to evolve, so does the portrayal of food within these genres. What began as simple tagging or stenciling has become complex, thought-provoking installations. Artists have started incorporating actual food items into their works, blurring the lines between the culinary and visual arts and inviting an experiential interaction with the viewer that can be as brief as the food itself. Food and eating are not merely subjects for Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork; they are conduits for expression, reflection, and sometimes, revolution. These depictions can comfort or confront, reflecting the complexity of our relationship with food. Through the lens of these vibrant art forms, food is not just sustenance but a symbol, a statement, and a shared language in the urban landscape. Whether it serves to provoke thought, evoke nostalgia, or critique society, the representation of food in street art is as varied and rich as the culinary traditions that inspire it.
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