Giclee Fine Art Print
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Vincent Langaard Hawxs.EXE Giclee Print by Vincent Langaard
Hawxs.EXE Giclee Print by Vincent Langaard Artwork Limited Edition Print on Hahnemühle Fine Art Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2025 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 30 Artwork Size 34x32 Glitched Out Hawk Birds Hawxs.EXE by Vincent Langaard: Digital Disintegration in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Hawxs.EXE is a 2025 signed and numbered limited edition giclée print by Norwegian artist Vincent Langaard, produced in an edition of 30 and printed on Hahnemühle fine art paper. Measuring 34 x 32 inches, this print represents a visual onslaught of avian anatomy and technological glitch, merging Langaard’s signature collage chaos with themes of digital corruption and identity distortion. The composition is dominated by an army of hawks, falcons, and hybridized raptors spiraling across the surface in fractured motion, many of them multiplied, glitched, or duplicated into unreadable patterns. At the center, a prominent hawk figure is traced in neon pink, the only clearly defined presence in a storm of hyperreal feathers, digital noise, and synthetic color overlays. The artwork feels like a corrupted hard drive of wildlife photography, dissected and rewritten with code. Feathers stretch unnaturally. Wings replicate in stuttered loops. Beaks dissolve into data shards. All of it is suspended against a violently vibrant background of rainbow gradients, blue sky, and digital interference, where sharp realism collides with surreal artificiality. Embedded mathematical symbols, algebraic notations, and characters like *5F+1 float throughout the image, suggesting a system of encryption or conceptual logic behind the visual breakdown. This use of mathematical markup contributes to the theme of system overload, echoing the visual language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork through layering, repetition, and sensory attack. Mutation, Pattern, and the Glitch as Subject Hawxs.EXE functions as both a visual metaphor and a data stream. Langaard utilizes the hawk not just as a symbolic bird of prey but as a digital asset—duplicated, corrupted, and recompiled. The hawk’s role as a predator becomes more complex when viewed through the lens of system failure and identity distortion. This idea is reinforced through the use of pattern-based collage, where wings become abstract textures and animal forms disintegrate into ornamental chaos. The central hawk, outlined in neon, offers a flickering focus amid the wreckage, anchoring the viewer's gaze and framing the surrounding collapse. This tension between precision and collapse mirrors the energy of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Artists in this space often repurpose mass media imagery and glitch-based aesthetics to disrupt expectation and communicate urgency. In Langaard’s hands, the hawk becomes a victim and vector of the glitch—a once-majestic figure now looped endlessly, data-sliced and recoded until it transforms into both warning and visual spectacle. Vincent Langaard’s Syntax of Digital Collapse Vincent Langaard continues to refine a language that draws equally from pop surrealism, internet decay, wildlife illustration, and graffiti’s aggressive composition style. His imagery blurs the boundary between illustration and system feedback, using distortion not only as a stylistic tool but as a conceptual anchor. In Hawxs.EXE, the chaos is intentional. The overloaded composition mimics the sensation of screen burn, buffering, and processor lag—only it plays out through feathers, beaks, and sharpened talons. Langaard’s print invites the viewer to interpret the natural world through a synthetic interface, questioning what is real, what is preserved, and what is now permanently corrupted. This work amplifies his reputation for character-centric abstraction and digital decay. It does not simply present hawks—it reinvents them as carriers of visual memory and error. The decision to print on Hahnemühle fine art paper preserves the detail and color clarity of each corrupted fold and motion trail, further reinforcing the tension between fine art production and graffiti-informed aesthetics. Hawxs.EXE as Collector Artifact and Aesthetic Warning The limited edition of 30 positions Hawxs.EXE not just as an artwork, but as a rare fragment of Vincent Langaard’s ongoing exploration of collapse, code, and identity. Each print is a snapshot of the moment just before total digital breakdown—a preserved warning system, captured through layered imagery and emotional overload. With its scale, visual aggression, and detailed texture, this work encapsulates the spirit of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork while pushing it deeper into the conceptual architecture of post-digital narrative. Langaard’s hawks are not flying—they are falling, fracturing, and relaunching within a corrupted interface. Their transformation becomes an act of reflection on surveillance, data saturation, and the rewiring of visual systems. Through this collision of natural form and synthetic interruption, Hawxs.EXE announces itself as both a powerful collectible and a poetic artifact of future decay.
$850.00
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Marwan Shahin Heavy is the Head AP Artist Proof Giclee Print by Marwan Shahin
Heavy is the Head Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Etching Rag Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Marwan Shahin. Number 1 of 28 Signed 32x32 2019 From the new Modern-day Pharaohs series comes "Heavy is the Head" artwork made for and inspired by the poetry work of Rob J. Naylor's book with the same title releasing sooon. "HEAVY IS THE HEAD” 2019 Giclée on Etching Rag Each print is Signed, Numbered & Branded comes with a Certificate of Authenticity.
$863.00
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Buff Monster Slippery Sundae Giclee Silkscreen Print by Buff Monster
Slippery Sundae Artwork Limited Edition Giclee & 1-Color Silkscreen Print on Bright Moab Entrada Fine Art Paper by Modern Artist Buff Monster. 2009 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 25 Artwork Size 32x32 The "Slippery Sundae" artwork by Buff Monster stands as a striking example of contemporary pop art, merging street art sensibilities with the acceptable art practice of silkscreen printing. Completed in 2009, this limited edition piece, restricted to 25 signed and numbered prints, is an exemplary model of Buff Monster's iconic style. Sized at 32x32 inches, the artwork offers a generous canvas for the artist's playful yet subversive vision. Buff Monster's work is renowned for its vibrant use of color and whimsical characters, often inspired by the melting landscapes of ice creams and the imagined worlds they inhabit. In "Slippery Sundae," the artist employs a one-color silkscreen process on Bright Moab Entrada Fine Art Paper, which allows for a high level of detail and a rich, tactile texture. This particular paper is chosen for its ability to capture the vividness of the pink hues and the graphic contrast of the grayscale elements, which are a signature feature in Buff Monster's art. Giclée printing also ensures that each piece is reproduced with precision, capturing every nuance of the original work. This artwork reflects Buff Monster's fascination with the juxtaposition of the bright and the gloomy, the sweet and the unsettling. It's a theme that resonates throughout his oeuvre, manifesting in the bubblegum-pink tsunami engulfing the cheerfully oblivious characters. With this piece, Buff Monster makes a statement about indulgence and the often-overlooked consequences of excess, packaged in a deceptively cute and digestible visual format. "Slippery Sundae" is not only a captivating addition to any pop art collection but also a reflection of the permeating influence of street art within modern visual culture. Through this limited edition print, Buff Monster bridges his street art beginnings with the exclusivity of fine art, allowing art collectors and enthusiasts to own a piece of this crossover. The artwork embodies the artist's journey through the art world – from the ephemeral nature of street graffiti to the lasting impact of fine art prints.
$1,341.00