Gold
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Cleon Peterson River of Blood Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson
River of Blood Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson Hand-Pulled 2-Color on Deckled Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print of 3 Nude Stylized Women Depressed or Sad or in Confusion in a River. Diving deep into the modern dimensions of artistry, Cleon Peterson's "River of Blood Gold" captures raw emotion with eloquence and profundity. This meticulously hand-pulled 2-color silkscreen print, set on the rich texture of deckled Coventry Rag fine art paper, speaks to the confluence of visceral human experiences and abstract artistic expression. Through the haunting portrayal of three nude, stylized women seemingly immersed in feelings of despair, sadness, or confusion, Peterson manages to convey a narrative that resonates with the chaos and introspection often inherent in the human experience. Rendered 18x24 inches, the artwork's striking monochromatic scheme is punctuated with intricate details, bringing forth an evocative depth. Each figure's posture and expression beckon the viewer to introspect, contemplate, and find a personal connection, thereby transcending the boundaries of mere observation. As they lay amidst the mysterious river, their presence becomes a potent symbol of vulnerability, inner turmoil, and the omnipresence of emotions in our lives. Peterson's piece, a signed and numbered limited edition of only 100, embodies the essence of pop, street, and graffiti art. It exemplifies the artist's ability to harness conventional artistic forms and infuse them with layers of meaning, inviting appreciation and deep contemplation. "River of Blood Gold" stands as a testament to Peterson's prowess, his understanding of human nuances, and his undying commitment to pushing the boundaries of visual storytelling.
$791.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY The Provocateurs- Chicago 2014- Gold Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
The Provocateurs- Chicago 2014- GoldLimited Edition Event Poster 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Artwork on Fine Art Paper by Shepard Fairey for The Provocateurs Chicago Art Show. The Provocateurs (Chicago) Shepard Fairey Gold Version Screen Print 18 x 24 inches Signed and Numbered Edition of 450, Gold Metallic Ink
$384.00
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Tran Nguyen The Yellow Passerby & I Silkscreen Print by Tran Nguyen
The Yellow Passerby & I 6-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Coventry Rag 290gsm Paper by Tran Nguyen Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. rtist: Tran Nguyen Title: "The Yellow Passerby & I" Medium: 6 Color Screenprint on Coventry Rag 290gsm Paper Edition: 100 Markings: Signed and Numbered by the Artist Dimensions: 18" x 26"
$243.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Sarcelle Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Sarcelle Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Sarcelle Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Pattern of Corruption Black Gold AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY x Cleon Peterson
Pattern of Corruption Black Gold AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY x Cleon Peterson Artist Proof Hand-Pulled 2-Color Screen Print on Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Graffiti Pop Street Artwork. AP Artist Proof 2015 Signed & AP Marked Original Run Limited Edition of 150 Artwork Size 18x24 Repeating Image of Tribal Man With Bloody Knife and Lotus Flower Vine Pattern Silkscreen "Cleon Peterson and I recently collaborated on a mural in Miami’s Wynwood district and were happy enough with the end result to decide to make some limited edition screen prints inspired by the mural. Cleon and I both deal with the persistent themes of the fragility of society, human savagery, and corruption in our work. The image has a dichotomy in its hypnotic classical floral pattern with sinister elements woven into it, which caution the viewer to look deeper than an appealing surface presentation." - SHepard Fairey "Pattern of Corruption Black Gold" is a striking representation of the collaboration between two giants of the street art world, Shepard Fairey, best known for his OBEY campaign, and Cleon Peterson. As an AP Silkscreen print, this piece emphasizes the hand-crafted nature of their work, a detail that resonates deeply with enthusiasts of street and pop art. Shepard Fairey's iconic art has always challenged societal norms, provoking viewers to consider underlying complexities and contradictions present in contemporary society. Cleon Peterson, with his depictions of chaotic human interactions, similarly forces viewers to grapple with the darker underbelly of humanity. The inspiration behind this piece emerged from the mural the duo worked on together in Miami’s Wynwood district, a place renowned for its vibrant street art scene. It's evident in the AP Silkscreen print how their artistic styles and messages seamlessly intertwine. The meticulous detail of a tribal man brandishing a bloody knife juxtaposed with the lotus flower vine pattern invites introspection on the duality of human nature. The combination of tribal motifs with classical floral patterns not only alludes to a blending of the traditional with the contemporary but also serves as a cautionary tale. The surface beauty of the design may lure the viewer in, but as Fairey himself mentioned, the sinister undertones remind us to delve deeper and question the allure. A limited-edition release, with only 150 prints available, the artwork has achieved heightened significance among collectors and enthusiasts. The hand-pulled, two-color screen print on fine art paper stands as a testament to the dedication of the artists to their craft. The "Pattern of Corruption Black Gold" is not merely an artwork; it's a poignant commentary on society's fragility and the ever-present themes of corruption and human savagery, themes that both Fairey and Peterson have consistently explored in their works.
$1,084.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Bleue Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Bleue Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Bleue Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Cleon Peterson Sirens Of The Past Night Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson
Sirens Of The Past Night Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson Hand-Pulled on Hand Deckled 290gm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Pop Street Art Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 18x22 Silkscreen Print of Stylized Gold & Black 3 Nude Siren Greek Myth Legends Emerging from the realm of pop art, street art, and graffiti, is an incredibly captivating piece of artwork, "Sirens Of The Past Night" silkscreen print, hand-pulled by Cleon Peterson. This magnificent piece, released in 2023, embodies an illustrious fusion of traditional silkscreen methods and modern artistic ideologies. Known for his expressive and provocative style, Peterson has once again crafted a masterpiece that stands as a testament to his prodigious talent. The artwork is one among a limited edition, with just 75 numbered pieces, each signed by the artist himself, rendering each print a unique collector's item. The print is presented on 290gm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper, a medium well-regarded for its capability to carry intricate designs and bold colors, a signature aspect of Peterson's work. The size of the artwork, at 18x22, offers a compelling canvas for Peterson to wield his creative prowess, while also making it a perfect addition to any art collection, whether for personal pleasure or public display. "Drenched in the hues of gold and black, "Sirens Of The Past Night" is a celebration of Greek mythology, portrayed through the lens of modern pop art. The focal point of the artwork revolves around the representation of three nude sirens, figures known in ancient tales for their enchanting voices and mesmerizing beauty. The sirens have been depicted with great detail and attention, their forms styled in a manner that is quintessentially Peterson - a fusion of raw street art elements and refined pop art aesthetics. The stylistic elements in the piece are intentionally provocative, echoing the artist’s commentary on societal conflicts and human nature. Peterson is renowned for his compelling visual narratives that delve into the paradoxical aspects of the human condition, the nuances of which can be observed in this print. The sirens symbolize not only their mythical attributes but can also be interpreted as metaphoric reflections of the human psyche, a recurring theme in his body of work. The artwork's choice of contrasting gold and black adds another layer of intrigue, signifying the perpetual conflict between light and darkness, good and evil. These dichotomies that persist in Peterson's work effectively entice the viewer into a profound exploration of the piece. The stark contrast between the luminous gold and the profound black, both in color and what they represent, further enhances the mesmerizing allure of the depicted sirens. "Sirens Of The Past Night" not only pays homage to Greek mythology but also contributes significantly to the evolution of pop and street art. Peterson’s keen ability to articulate complex narratives through his distinctive aesthetic language ensures this limited-edition print will be a coveted piece for art collectors and enthusiasts alike. With each stroke, each contrast, and each meticulously crafted siren, Cleon Peterson encapsulates the very essence of what makes street art a riveting genre, all the while honoring the rich narratives of ancient legends. A testament to his incredible talent, "Sirens Of The Past Night" stands as an artistic beacon in contemporary pop and street art.
$780.00
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Cleon Peterson Vote Keep Hope & Freedom Alive Black & Gold Print by Cleon Peterson
Vote Keep Hope & Freedom Alive Black & Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson on Hand Deckled 290gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork. 2024 Signed & Numbered Cleon Peterson Limited Edition of 80 Artwork Size 18x24 Political Democrat Silkscreen Print of Woman on a Horse Holding US Flag. Vote Keep Hope & Freedom Alive Black & Gold Silkscreen Print The Vote Keep Hope & Freedom Alive Black & Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson represents a compelling example of Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork, merging political activism with striking visual design. Created in 2024, this piece is a limited edition, with only 80 signed and numbered prints, making it a coveted item for collectors. The print measures 18x24 inches and is produced on 290gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper with hand-deckled edges, showcasing exceptional craftsmanship. The gold and black color scheme elevates its bold design, adding a sense of elegance and prominence to the artwork’s powerful message of hope and freedom. The Signature Style of Cleon Peterson Cleon Peterson, born in 1973 in the United States, is an artist known for his stark and impactful visual language. His art explores themes of conflict, resistance, and social power, often depicted through bold compositions and limited palettes. The Vote Keep Hope & Freedom Alive Black & Gold print features a central figure of a woman riding a horse, holding the American flag high, symbolizing resilience and determination. The use of gold in the design represents triumph and glory, while the black provides a grounding, dramatic contrast. This dynamic composition exemplifies Peterson’s ability to merge political commentary with aesthetically striking imagery. The Role of Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork in Political Activism Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork have historically served as vehicles for political expression, making them highly relevant in today’s cultural and social landscape. This print captures the spirit of democratic engagement, urging viewers to reflect on their roles as active participants in shaping the future. The woman on horseback, a recurring symbol of power and leadership, is rendered with clean lines and minimal details, ensuring the focus remains on the symbolism of action and movement. The gold accents bring an air of celebration, reinforcing the idea that voting is both a privilege and a responsibility. Craftsmanship and Limited Editions The hand-deckled 290gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper adds a tangible sense of quality to the print, underscoring its status as a collector’s item. Limited to only 80 signed and numbered pieces, this artwork carries a sense of exclusivity while amplifying its political message. By blending the aesthetics of fine art with the accessibility of street and pop culture influences, Peterson bridges artistic worlds. His use of silkscreen techniques recalls the traditions of Pop Art while embracing the raw, urban energy associated with graffiti and street art, ensuring this piece resonates with contemporary audiences. This limited edition serves as both a visual statement and a call to action, embodying hope and freedom through the lens of modern art.
$563.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Don’t Be a MFR AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Don't Be a MFR AP Artist Proof Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY Hand-Pulled 5-Color on Cream Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork Obey Pop Culture Artist. AP Artist Proof 2015 Signed by Shepard Fairey- OBEY & Numbered Limited Edition of 550 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print. Don't Be A Mother Fucker. Don't Be A MOTHER#*X!! R Respect & Justice. The Provocative Appeal of 'Don't Be a MFR' by Shepard Fairey Shepard Fairey's 'Don't Be a MFR AP' is a bold exemplar in street pop art and graffiti artwork. Fairey, an American artist and provocateur born on February 15, 1970, continues to push the boundaries of art and activism. This particular work, part of an artist-proof (AP) series released in 2015, is characteristic of Fairey's approach to engaging with cultural and societal themes through his art. The hand-pulled 5-color silkscreen print on cream speckle tone paper echoes Fairey's distinctive aesthetic while carrying a strong message of respect and justice. Symbolism and Messaging in 'Don't Be a MFR' The artwork's title, 'Don't Be a MFR,' captures the eye with its intentional censoring, a tactic that allows for a broad interpretation and stirs curiosity. Within the limited edition series of 550, each piece sized at 18x24 inches, Fairey's work resonates with the power of command and the gravity of a public service announcement. The print is decorated with the words' Respect & Justice,' a direct call to action central to much of Fairey's oeuvre. Fairey employs symbols like the skull enveloped in a flower, a duality that speaks to the juxtaposition of life and death, growth and decay, reinforcing the message of the consequences of one's actions. The overall design is reminiscent of emblems and seals, often associated with authority and institutions, which Fairey repurposes to deliver his socio-political commentary. The choice of bold, angular graphics, in conjunction with the roundness of the emblematic seal, displays the tension between disruption and order, a recurrent theme in street pop art. Impact on Street Pop Art and Cultural Discourse The 'Don't Be a MFR' series exemplifies the potential of street pop art to serve as a medium for societal reflection and critique. The use of a public vernacular and the direct address to the viewer exemplify Fairey's commitment to making art accessible and demanding attention. Each print in the series, bearing Fairey's signature, is a testament to the belief that art should not shy away from controversy but rather confront and challenge the viewer. This piece, in particular, adds to the rich tapestry of graffiti artwork that has historically been used to communicate messages to a broad audience, often bypassing traditional media and institutional spaces. Fairey's work is a modern-day manifestation of this tradition, utilizing the urban canvas to prompt a public introspection on issues of respect and justice. The artwork serves not just as a visual spectacle but as a catalyst for conversation and, ideally, for action. Shepard Fairey and the Continuum of Artistic Activism Shepard Fairey's 'Don't Be a MFR' continues the artist's enduring legacy in art and activism. Residing in Los Angeles, California, Fairey remains a significant influence, harnessing the vibrancy of street pop art to voice his dissent and mobilize public sentiment. His work is anchored in the belief that art is a powerful change agent capable of inspiring individuals to think critically about the world around them. This particular silkscreen print carries the OBEY logo, an integral aspect of Fairey's brand, which doubles as a command and a critique of authoritarian tendencies. The artwork's appeal lies in its ability to be aggressive and reflective at once, pushing observers to consider their role in maintaining or disrupting social justice. Fairey's dedication to the intersection of art and societal issues solidifies his position as an artist and a significant cultural instigator in contemporary times.
$1,341.00
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Brian Ewing Joker Darkest Knight Silkscreen Print by Brian Ewing
Joker- Darkest Knight 3-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Brian Ewing Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. 2021 Batman Joker Darkest Knight Edition of 50 Signed and Numbered
$214.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Holiday Mandala Gift 2013 AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Flower Power Red AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY Artist Proof Hand-Pulled Screen Print on Speckletone Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Pop Street Art Artwork. AP Artist Proof 2013 Signed & AP Marked Original Run Limited Edition Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print Given As Christmas Gift To Friends & Family of Artist. Red Lotus Flower & Star Obey Andre The Giant Logo. Shepard Fairey, globally recognized for his OBEY campaign, showcases his talents again with his "Flower Power Red AP" silkscreen print, a symbolic representation of his signature style meshed with socio-political undertones. This hand-pulled screen print, meticulously crafted on Speckletone Fine Art Paper, belongs to a series of artist proofs from 2013. Characteristic of Fairey's dedication to detail and passion for unique designs, artist proofs are initial impressions made by the artist during the creative process, ensuring the final product's fidelity to their vision. These proofs, while seldom made available for public purchase, are deeply personal and often reserved for those closest to the artist. Such is the case with the "Flower Power Red AP," given as a treasured Christmas gift to friends and family. The artwork itself stands as a juxtaposition of vibrant aesthetics and profound symbolism. Dominated by the hues of fiery red, it features a lotus flower—a traditional symbol of purity and rebirth—surrounded by the iconic star from the OBEY campaign and the unmistakable Andre the Giant logo. While street art often blends subversive elements with the contemporary, Fairey's choice of symbols is a testament to his penchant for evoking thought and discourse. Positioned at the intersection of pop art, street art, and graffiti, "Flower Power Red AP" is not just a testament to Fairey's unparalleled skill but also an encapsulation of the rebellious spirit and critique of popular culture.
$1,084.00
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Marwan Shahin High Time- High All Night Giclee Print by Marwan Shahin
High Time- High All Night Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Photographique Rag Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Marwan Shahin. Marwan Shahin's "High All Night" Collectors edition of only 5 prints of each. From High Time series, Debuting in 2015, Released for the first time produced by Shahin Studios, released in celebration of the new year. Only 5 Available of each2015 18 inches x 22 inches Giclée on Photographique Rag Signed, Numbered, Embossed and Branded High Time: High All Night by Marwan Shahin – A Timepiece of Surrealism and Symbolic Luxury High All Night from Marwan Shahin’s High Time series is a limited edition giclée print that explores the fusion of luxury iconography with deeply symbolic visual storytelling. Released in 2015 and printed on 18 x 22 inch Photographique Rag paper, this artwork is part of an ultra-exclusive collector’s edition—just five prints exist, each signed, numbered, embossed, and branded by the artist. In this captivating piece, Shahin transforms a luxury wristwatch into a surreal portrait of time, identity, and indulgence. At the heart of the watch face lies a serene, almost celestial human visage, rendered with Shahin’s signature linework. The hypnotic spiral of concentric lines forming the face draws the viewer inward, suggesting a meditation on time as an infinite, psychedelic experience. The eyes glow with a reddish haze, implying both fatigue and euphoria—an embodiment of the High All Night title. The watch bezel is crowned with a reference to the Rolex coronet, placing the work firmly in the cultural orbit of status, consumerism, and power. Luxury Dissected Through the Lens of Street Pop Art Marwan Shahin’s visual language consistently challenges the viewer to re-evaluate societal values through the lens of street pop art and graffiti artwork. In High All Night, he uses the recognizable shape and prestige of a Rolex-style timepiece as a stand-in for themes of capitalist worship, eternal urgency, and the blurred line between high life and high mind. The aesthetic is sharp and deliberate, with bold blues and golds contrasted against spiraling black linework, capturing the cyclical nature of indulgence and repetition. By integrating the human face into the machinery of a watch, Shahin offers commentary on how time has become internalized—both a measure and a master. The red eyes framed within a luxury symbol evoke a culture caught between glamour and exhaustion, where time is both a drug and a debt. The visual metaphor pushes viewers to question what they are measuring with their time: productivity or experience, ambition or presence. Visual Storytelling Across Time Zones and States of Mind High All Night functions on multiple levels—as an homage to traditional craftsmanship, a critique of luxury culture, and a deeply symbolic expression of modern life. The hypnotic details recall both ancient Egyptian engravings and the precision of high-end horology, while the surreal face speaks to the human cost of keeping up with a relentless world. Shahin's decision to use fine art giclée printing enhances the tactile and tonal qualities of the work, creating a luminous, museum-quality piece that captures the nuances of his inking and shading. Unlike many works in the pop or graffiti art genre that rely on brashness or satire alone, Shahin’s High Time series offers layered depth. It invites introspection, yet its polished execution and visual clarity make it immediately arresting. The print's ultra-limited nature—a mere five copies—ensures that it becomes not only a meditation on rarity but also a rare object itself. A Timeless Reflection in the Face of the Clock Marwan Shahin’s High All Night reminds us that luxury is not always liberating, and time is not always linear. It is a portrait of an age where the watch on the wrist says as much about identity as it does about hours passed. In Shahin’s hands, the watch becomes a mirror, a face, and a symbol—watching us as much as we watch it. With this artwork, Shahin once again proves his ability to distill the spirit of contemporary culture into a single, unforgettable image that transcends trend and challenges perception.
$352.00
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Angel Gonzalez Da Street Corner Silkscreen Print by Angel Gonzalez
Da Street Corner Limited Edition 1-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Angel Gonzalez Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. Angel Gonzalez's debut silkscreen print, titled 'Da Street Corner' is one color (metallic gold) 18 x 24-inch screenprint. The screens were shot in the sun using a hand-cut rubylith with an edition size of 26.
$226.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Does She Look Down Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Does She Look Down Limited Edition 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Speckled Cream Paper by Pop Artist Shepard Fairey. 2012 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 450 Artwork Size 18x24
$384.00
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Clint Wilson Hefe POP Silkscreen Print by Clint Wilson
Hefe POP Limited Edition 2-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Artist Clint Wilson. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 100
$159.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Juane Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Juane Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Juane Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Justin Anville 1919 Pelican Tombs Pennsylvania 2009 Silkscreen Print by Justin Anville
1919- Pelican Tombs- Pennsylvania 2009 Music Limited Edition Gig Poster 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Artwork on Fine Art Paper by Justin Anville. 2019 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition Gig Music Poster Artwork Size 18x24. 919, Pelican Tombs, Music, Event, Theatre of Living Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 3rd 2009, Live Nation The Synthesis of Music and Street Pop Art The convergence of music and visual arts often produces memorabilia that transcends the moment of its creation, embedding itself in the cultural fabric of a time and place. Such is the case with the limited edition gig poster for the event featuring "1919" and "Pelican Tombs" held at the Theatre of Living Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 3rd, 2009. This striking piece of street pop art and graffiti artwork is a celebration of both the bands and the evocative power of graphic design within the realm of music. This limited edition gig poster is more than just a promotional tool; it is a collectible artwork that reflects the vibrancy and raw energy of the musical acts it represents. Created by the artist Justin Anville, the print is a four-color, hand-pulled silkscreen on fine art paper, a technique that lends the artwork a tactile quality that is both immediate and engaging. The choice of silkscreen printing, a favored method in both street art and pop art for its bold colors and sharp lines, allows the piece to stand out with a visual pop that mirrors the intensity of the live music experience. Visual Elements and Artistic Significance The artwork commands attention with its intricate design and contrasting color palette, which features a dominant red against a backdrop of more subdued tones. At the center, the stylized numerals "1919" are prominently displayed, intertwined with symbolic imagery that suggests a narrative extending beyond the bands' names. This typographic treatment is reminiscent of graffiti art, where letters become an integral part of the visual impact, often carrying meaning in their form as much as in their content. Cultural Imprint of the 2009 Event Poster Limited to a signed and numbered edition, the poster carries with it an aura of exclusivity. Measuring 18x24 inches, it is a sizable piece that was designed to be noticed, to be a talking point, and ultimately, to be remembered. As a piece of memorabilia, it serves as a timestamp, capturing the cultural zeitgeist of the late 2000s Philadelphia music scene, a period marked by a resurgence in indie and alternative genres. The inclusion of the Live Nation brand also signifies the commercial and mainstream acknowledgment of the genres and bands, hinting at their movement from the fringes into the spotlight. The Legacy of Gig Posters in Street Pop Art The significance of gig posters like this one extends beyond the night of the event itself. They are artifacts of cultural history, capturing the essence of musical movements and the artistic styles that accompany them. In the broader context of street pop art and graffiti artwork, gig posters are often the crossroads where music and visual art fans meet, share, and appreciate the interplay between these forms of expression. This particular poster, with its bold aesthetic and connection to a specific time and place, is a perfect illustration of how street art and music can come together to create something enduring. In the ever-evolving dialogue between music and visual arts, the 2009 limited edition gig poster for "1919" and "Pelican Tombs" stands as a testament to the power of this collaboration. It is not just a promotional item; it is a snapshot of a scene, a piece of street pop art, and a collectible that holds within its inks and paper the echoes of a night of music and the spirit of its time.
$214.00
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Nate Duval Soul Sister Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval
Soul Sister Hand-Pulled 2-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2012 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 18x24 Metallic Gold Ink "That is one funky momma’… Show your love for vinyl (after all, it does sound better) with this 2-color print (black and metallic gold!)18” x 24”, signed, limited edition of 75 posters." -Nate Duval
$180.00
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Cryptik Here & Now Gold Foil Serigraph Print by Cryptik
Here & Now Gold Foil Serigraph Print by Cryptik Limited Edition Hand Pulled Artwork on Gold Foil Fine Art Paper Modern Street Graffiti Pop Artist. 2024 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 18x24 "The past no longer is, the future is not yet here; there is only one moment in which life is available, and that is the present.." ~ Thich Nhat Hanh Unveiling the "Here & Now" by Cryptik In modern street art, Cryptik's "Here & Now" stands as a sterling example of the genre's intersection with spiritual philosophy. The limited edition serigraph print, crafted on opulent gold foil fine art paper, carries a timeless message underscored by the insightful words of Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh. Only 75 signed and numbered pieces were released in 2024, each measuring 18x24 inches, reflecting an exclusivity that parallels the uniqueness of the present moment it seeks to encapsulate. The Transcendental Aesthetics of Cryptik's Art Cryptik's distinct calligraphic style interweaves traditional Eastern motifs with the immediacy of street art, creating a visual meditation on the notion of the eternal 'now.' The gold foil serves as more than just a backdrop; it is a symbol of the sacred, often used in religious iconography, here repurposed to elevate street art to new heights of reverence and contemplation. Gold Foil Serigraphy: A Convergence of Technique and Message Serigraphy, or screen printing, is a method lauded for its ability to produce vivid colors and sharp lines, a technique that Cryptik employs masterfully. The meticulous hand-pulling of each print ensures every detail, from the delicate strokes of each character to the shimmering gold background, is rendered with precision. The "Here & Now" is thus not only an artwork but a bridge between the ancient practice of mindfulness and the contemporary pulse of street art. The serene complexity of "Here & Now" captures the viewer's gaze, inviting them to ponder the intertwined nature of time, existence, and art. In this piece, Cryptik offers visual stimulation and a portal to introspection, aligning with the essence of street pop art & graffiti artwork, which often prompts the observer to look beyond the surface. Cryptik's serigraph print serves as a reminder of the fleeting beauty of the present, encapsulating the impermanence of street art and the enduring profundity of spiritual thought. As much a philosophical artifact as a piece of visual art, "Here & Now" stands as a testament to the profound depths that street art can explore, marrying the visceral with the sublime. Through this work, Cryptik asserts that the most profound truths are often found in plain sight, woven into the fabric of our everyday surroundings.
$1,116.00
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Nate Duval The District of Columbia Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval
The District of Columbia Hand-Pulled 2-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2010 Signed Limited Edition Artwork Size 18x24 Metallic Gold Ink Washington DC
$103.00
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Cleon Peterson Sorrow Black Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson
Sorrow Black Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson Hand-Pulled 2-Color Screen Print on 290gsm Coventry Rag Paper Hand DeckledLimited Edition Pop Street Art Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 18x24 "Sorrow Black" is a silkscreen print by contemporary American artist Cleon Peterson. Known for his provocative and often violent imagery, Peterson's work explores themes of power dynamics, chaos, and brutality in society. The "Sorrow Black" silkscreen print features a striking monochromatic color palette, with black and gold imagery that showcases the artist's signature style. The piece depict a figure engaged in challenging and confrontational thought. Cleon Peterson's work has been exhibited in galleries and museums around the world, and he has gained recognition for his distinct, often unsettling approach to art. The "Sorrow Black" print is a prime example of his work, embodying the dark, confrontational themes that define his artistic vision.
$759.00
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Patrick Connan King Conan Gold AP Silkscreen Print by Patrick Connan
King Conan- Gold Limited Edition 5-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Patrick Connan Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. Only 4 made! 5 Color Screen Print (including metallic Gold inks) AP Artist Proof Edition 18" x 24" Signed & Numbered
$240.00
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Nate Duval Gold Silver Cubic Mandala Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval
Gold Silver Cubic Mandala 4-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Artwork. 2012 Signed Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 18x24 Gold Silver & Copper Metallic Ink
$180.00
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Cleon Peterson Take Me Now Black & Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson
Take Me Now Black & Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson on Hand Deckled 290gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Artwork. 2024 Signed & Numbered Cleon Peterson Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 18x18 Silkscreen Print. Take Me Now Black & Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson Take Me Now Black & Gold Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson stands as a striking example of the artist’s characteristic style and thematic focus. Cleon Peterson, an American artist known for stark depictions of struggle and confrontation, has built a reputation for bold monochromatic works that draw the eye and provoke conversation. This piece presents figures in dynamic conflict, rendered in gold against a deep black background. Each figure’s form is both angular and fluid, capturing a sense of motion that reflects a stark view of human interaction. The size measures 18x18, making it a balanced composition with high-impact visual appeal. Printed on hand deckled 290gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper, the texture and weight of the paper enhance the overall impact. Signed and numbered by Cleon Peterson in 2024, the edition is limited to 100, creating a rare opportunity for collectors and enthusiasts to acquire a piece that underscores the artist’s ongoing exploration of power dynamics. The print’s name suggests tension and urgency, resonating with the typical themes in Peterson’s work. He frequently examines moral dualities, using stark color contrasts and bold shapes to evoke visceral emotional responses. Viewers often see a commentary on aggression and conflict, yet the piece also invites deeper reflection on the complexities of human behavior. The black and gold palette offers a refined aesthetic, lending an air of elegance to a scene that might otherwise be unsettling. Each brush stroke and line remains crisp due to the high-quality silkscreen process, granting an enduring vibrancy that collectors value in limited edition works. The hand deckled edges further elevate the tactile experience, emphasizing the craftsmanship of this print. Bold Symbolism within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Cleon Peterson’s distinct visual language has positioned him at the intersection of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork with contemporary fine art. His bold approach takes cues from graphic design and urban culture, reflecting influences that range from European street murals to American underground zines. The sense of energy in Take Me Now Black & Gold Silkscreen Print recalls the raw power found in many street art pieces. Peterson’s figures, locked in combative poses, mirror the high-impact imagery seen in graffiti and pop-infused works. This synergy between classical printmaking and urban-inspired motifs makes his creations resonate with diverse audiences worldwide. The flat planes of color carry a graphic punch that suits those who appreciate both street-inspired aesthetics and the refinement of traditional silkscreen techniques. Collectible Appeal and Fine Art Details Collectors seek out Cleon Peterson’s signed and numbered prints for their enduring value and bold storytelling. Limited to only 100 editions in this 2024 release, Take Me Now Black & Gold Silkscreen Print embodies exclusivity and artistic ambition. Each piece features the rich contrast of black and metallic gold, capturing light in a way that accentuates the dynamic composition. The 290gsm Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper ensures the print’s longevity, while the hand deckled finish adds a personal touch that stands apart from machine-cut edges. This combination of premium materials, powerful imagery, and Peterson’s signature further solidifies its place in collections focused on Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Enthusiasts and new admirers alike often find that Cleon Peterson’s work sparks conversation, reminding viewers of the complexities of human behavior through a raw yet refined vision.
$563.00
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Dave Kinsey Dome AP Silkscreen Print by Dave Kinsey
Dome Limited Edition 2-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on 100% Cotton Rag Archival Paper by Dave Kinsey Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. BLK/MRKT AP Artist Proof. Unlearn Taught Believed Misled Molded Pursued
$355.00
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Clint Wilson Hefe POP Small Tear Silkscreen Print by Clint Wilson
Hefe POP Small Tear Limited Edition 2-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Artist Clint Wilson. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 100 Small tear on lower left facing side out of the image on the white border.
$103.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Street Weapons Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey OBEY x MFG Matt Goldman
Street Weapons Danceright Music Club Event Limited Edition Metallic Gold Ink Gig Poster 3-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print Artwork on Cream Speckletone Paper by MFG- Matt Goldman x Shepard Fairey. Shepard and I ran a club night in Downtown LA from 2006 to 2014 called Dance Right. During that time, I created a flyer every week and from those flyers came a bunch of designs that ended up becoming clothing designs for OBEY Clothing and a collab poster that Shepard and MFG- Matt Goldman released in 2006. 18 x 24 inches Screen Print Black, Dark Red, Metallic Gold Cream Speckletone Paper Edition of 300 Signed and numbered by Shepard Fairey & MFG- Matt Goldman Released 2006
$1,497.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY NØISE/SSI Resurrectionem Ex-Mortuis Remix Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
NØISE/SSI Resurrectionem Ex-Mortuis Remix 2-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Cream Speckle Tone Paper by Shepard Fairey Rare Street Art OBEY Pop Artwork Artist. 18 inches by 18 inches Edition of 400 March 30, 2021 About I have been friends with John Goff for 25 years. He was a fan of my art and used to generously help me print. We often bonded over music from the Melvins, to Kraftwerk, to RUN-DMC. John has been a musician most of his life, playing in several different music projects over the years, including SSI which is a collaboration between John and his brother Will. When I started DJ’ing John would help me with the production of remixes. Eventually, we started producing some music together, and with the valuable addition of Merritt Lear and Joe Cassidy, we formed Nøise. -Shepard Fairey
$384.00
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Marwan Shahin High Time- High All Day Giclee Print by Marwan Shahin
High Time- High All Day Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Photographique Rag Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Marwan Shahin. Marwan Shahin's "High All Day" Collectors edition of only 5 prints of each. From High Time series, Debuting in 2015, Released for the first time produced by Shahin Studios, released in celebration of the new year. Only 5 Available of each2015 18 inches x 22 inches Giclée on Photographique Rag Signed, Numbered, Embossed and Branded High Time: High All Day by Marwan Shahin – A Radiant Fusion of Time, Status, and Enlightenment High All Day is a standout piece from Marwan Shahin’s acclaimed High Time series, crafted in 2015 and released in an extremely limited edition of only five prints. Produced on 18 x 22 inch Photographique Rag paper and finished with Shahin’s signature embossing, branding, and numbering, this giclée print extends the series’ surreal reinterpretation of luxury timepieces as profound cultural and symbolic artifacts. In High All Day, Shahin replaces the watch dial with a celestial face encircled by golden rays, transforming the wristwatch into a sun deity—a visual metaphor for illumination, opulence, and modern obsessions with visibility and value. The radiant gold of the spiked bezel bursts outward like a sun crown, each point merging elements of a timepiece's mechanics with solar symbolism. At the center of the dial, the intricately detailed face gazes out hypnotically with spiral-rendered features and reddened eyes, echoing the dreamy haze found in High All Night. However, where High All Night explores the twilight haze of indulgence, High All Day evokes the blinding clarity of the spotlight—fame, materialism, and constant awareness. Time as Power, Time as Currency Marwan Shahin continues his exploration of modern symbolism through the framework of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The work critiques the societal glorification of luxury, fame, and hyper-productivity. The gilded wristwatch—a universal symbol of affluence and achievement—is elevated into a mythic idol, reminiscent of both solar gods and corporate logos. The crown at the top of the watch dial references Rolex, reinforcing the link between luxury branding and cultural deification. This stylized anthropomorphization of the timepiece underscores the duality of time as both liberator and captor. The spiraling background, rendered in precise linework, creates a kinetic energy around the figure. The radial blue field suggests motion, light, and expansion, as if the sun-like figure is actively emitting influence. This energy resonates with Shahin’s intent to depict how fame and status radiate outward—both elevating and consuming those who orbit them. Graffiti Philosophy Meets Symbolic Precision As with the rest of the High Time series, High All Day is grounded in a meticulously detailed aesthetic. The symmetry of the design, the geometric rhythm of the band, and the finely etched facial features show Shahin’s background in architecture and classical draftsmanship. Yet it remains rooted in street pop culture through bold iconography and visual commentary. The glowing red eyes signal both fatigue and vigilance, implying that in today’s digital age, even daylight is infused with the pressure to perform and stay visible. This piece pushes the viewer to consider how contemporary society equates time with productivity, productivity with value, and visibility with validation. In this way, High All Day not only satirizes luxury watches but transforms them into a canvas for spiritual and sociopolitical critique. A Daylight Manifesto in Giclée Form Marwan Shahin’s High All Day serves as a radiant counterpoint to High All Night, reflecting the relentless pulse of daytime hustle and social exposure. With only five prints ever made, it offers rarity that mirrors the exclusivity it critiques. Both sacred and satirical, it merges ancient sun symbolism with modern material culture, making it a powerful artifact for collectors of contemporary street pop art. Through High All Day, Shahin continues his exploration of the ways humans personify time, idolize wealth, and seek transcendence through possession.
$352.00
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JM Rizzi Lines In The Slipstream #14 Original Drawing by JM Rizzi
Lines In The Slipstream #14 Original One of a Kind Marker Ink Drawing Artwork on Watercolor Fine Art Paper by Popular Street Art Pop Culture Artist JM Rizzi. 2022 Signed Original Marker Ink Painting Size 18x24 “Ours are tense times. Eyes closed, I surrender to the slipstream, skate the wake of an energetic flow that never stops. This series of works on paper marks a more sophisticated experiment with abstract motifs. The aluminum of an airplane and regal gold all ripple and tangle like eddies punctuated by crimson. The final act—amalgamating metallic hues with wiry black lines that interrogate the delineation between positive and negative space. Visually interpreting the tacit sensation of human history’s everlasting propulsion.” –JM Rizzi
$596.00
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Dan Grzeca Reconstructed Snowy Owl Metallic Silkscreen Print by Dan Grzeca
Reconstructed Snowy Owl Metallic Silkscreen Print by Dan Grzeca Hand-Pulled on Black Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Screenprint Artwork. 2013 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print Reconstructed Snowy Owl: A Metallic Silkscreen Masterpiece by Dan Grzeca The Reconstructed Snowy Owl Metallic Silkscreen Print by Dan Grzeca, released in 2013, is a stunning hand-pulled screenprint that captures the mystical presence of the snowy owl against a richly textured black fine art paper. Created in a limited edition of 75, this 18x24-inch print is a testament to Grzeca’s ability to merge intricate linework with bold, expressive forms, making it a significant piece in street pop art & graffiti artwork. Intricate Linework and Metallic Accents Dan Grzeca’s signature cross-hatching and textured strokes are on full display in this piece, emphasizing depth, movement, and raw energy. The metallic ink application adds a layer of vibrancy, allowing the snowy owl’s feathers and form to shimmer against the dark background. This careful balance of light and shadow gives the print an ethereal quality, reinforcing the mystical and regal presence of the owl. The owl is depicted perched atop a weathered barn, a recurring theme in Grzeca’s work, which often explores rural landscapes, industrial decay, and nature’s endurance. The structure beneath the bird appears to be fragmented or reconstructed, suggesting themes of transformation, resilience, and adaptation—elements frequently found in street pop art & graffiti artwork that comment on the changing urban and rural landscapes. Symbolism and Natural Iconography The snowy owl is often associated with wisdom, mystery, and silent observation, making it a fitting subject for Grzeca’s raw and evocative artistic approach. His work consistently merges mythology, wildlife, and urban decay, creating a narrative that feels both timeless and contemporary. The way the owl looms over the barn, almost as if it is emerging from the structure, suggests a spiritual connection between nature and human-made environments. This print also aligns with the broader ethos of street pop art & graffiti artwork, where animals and natural symbols are frequently used to represent freedom, survival, and resistance against industrial encroachment. The juxtaposition of organic and man-made forms in this piece echoes themes found in urban murals, stencil graffiti, and print-based street art, reinforcing the idea that wildlife remains ever-present even as cities expand. Dan Grzeca’s Influence on Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Grzeca’s printmaking style is deeply rooted in DIY aesthetics, a fundamental characteristic of street pop art & graffiti artwork. His dedication to hand-pulled silkscreen techniques, raw linework, and heavily textured compositions places him among artists who use printmaking as a powerful storytelling tool. The Reconstructed Snowy Owl print stands as a perfect example of his ability to merge intricate craftsmanship with urban expression, making it a sought-after piece among collectors and art enthusiasts. Through this work, Grzeca continues to push the boundaries of traditional screenprinting, proving that hand-crafted, limited-edition prints maintain their place in the evolving landscape of contemporary street pop art. His approach remains highly influential, reinforcing the enduring relevance of printmaking in modern urban and nature-inspired art movements.
$218.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Fashion Addict Refill Versace 2 AP Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Fashion Addict Refill- Versace 2 Limited Edition Archival Pigment Fine Art Print on 330gsm Canon Fine Art Paper by Legend Street Art and Modern Pop Culture Artist Denial. AP Artist Proof 2019 Signed Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 18x24 Versace 2 Designer Fashion Drug Pill. AP Artist Proof Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse, Normal Edition of 100, 18x24, Archival Pigment Print on 330 GSM Canon Fine Art Paper. Essentially, Denial is satirizing the reality, which both he and us are experiencing, through some of the Western culture’s most emblematic symbols. Denial is utilizing cultural products with the intention to make a statement against the system, which gave birth to them. As a result, he re-contextualizes them and transforms them from commercial products to his cultural legacy.
$572.00
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Naoto Hattori Super Bionics Giclee Print by Naoto Hattori
Super Bionics Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Surreal Print on 100% Cotton Rag Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Naoto Hattori.
$351.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Friendship and Support- Gold Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Friendship and Support- Gold 4-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Fine Speckletone Art Paper by Shepard Fairey Rare Street Art OBEY Pop Artwork Artist. 2011 Signed & Numbered Screen Print Friendship and Support (Gold), 2011 Screenprint in colors on speckled cream paper 18x24 inches (61 x 45.7 cm) (sheet) Ed. 450 Signed, numbered, and dated in pencil along the lower edge Published by Obey Giant, Los Angeles Due to the enormous popular demand for “Friendship & Support” released last week, we are excited to announce a second colorway at the request of the Harrison Foundation! “Friendship and Support – Gold” supporting UNICEF!
$917.00
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Burrito Breath Chop Til You Drop Silkscreen Print by Burrito Breath
Chop Til You Drop 3-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Gold Metallic Ink Silkscreen Print on Thick Fine Art Paper by Burrito Breath x Hanks Cycles Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist.
$217.00
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Saner Tenochtitlan Hot Foil Silkscreen Print by Saner
Tenochtitlan- Hot Foil Hand-Pulled Limited Edition 2-Color Hot Foil Print on 13.5 PT Neenah Natural White Smooth Classic Crest Fine Art Paper by Saner Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. 2022 Signed 2-Color Hot Foil Print on 13.5 PT Neenah Natural White Smooth Classic Crest Fine Art Paper Size: 18 x 24 Inches Release: January 17, 2022 Run of: 25
$631.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Mauve Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Mauve Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Mauve Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Rose Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Rose Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Rose Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Saner Ixtli Hot Foil Print by Saner
Ixtli- Hot Foil Hand-Pulled Limited Edition 2-Color Hot Foil Print on 13.5 PT Neenah Natural White Smooth Classic Crest Fine Art Paper by Saner Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. 2022 Signed 2-Color Hot Foil Print on 13.5 PT Neenah Natural White Smooth Classic Crest Fine Art Paper Size: 18 x 24 Inches Release: January 17, 2022 Run of: 25
$631.00
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Cleon Peterson Sorrow White Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson
Sorrow White Silkscreen Print by Cleon Peterson Hand-Pulled 2-Color Screen Print on 290gsm Coventry Rag Paper Hand DeckledLimited Edition Pop Street Art Artwork. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 75 Artwork Size 18x24 "Sorrow White" is a silkscreen print by contemporary American artist Cleon Peterson. Known for his provocative and often violent imagery, Peterson's work explores themes of power dynamics, chaos, and brutality in society. The "Sorrow White" silkscreen print features a striking monochromatic color palette, with white, black and gold imagery that showcases the artist's signature style. The piece depict a figure engaged in challenging and confrontational thought. Cleon Peterson's work has been exhibited in galleries and museums around the world, and he has gained recognition for his distinct, often unsettling approach to art. The "Sorrow Black" print is a prime example of his work, embodying the dark, confrontational themes that define his artistic vision.
$759.00
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Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas Wild Card Boxing Club Calavera Silkscreen Print by Ernesto Yerena Montejano- Hecho Con Ganas
Wild Card Boxing Club Calavera Limited Edition 1-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Ernesto Yerena Montejano Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 2015 Signed & Numbered Wild Card Boxing Calavera 18x24 Edition of 300 Signed and Numbered Signed by Freddie Roach & Ernesto Yerena Montejano "Growing up in a Mexican-American working class family and community, I remember how important sports were to most of my friends and their families. Particularly, I so remember the early 90’s and seeing a lot of Raider, Charger, Chivas de Guadalajara and America jersey’s and of course those of the Dodger’s and their blue and white hats with the iconic LA blazoned on the front. But my immediate family was different. My dad who in the early 1990’s sold automotive paint and painted cars was surprisingly not that much into the usual sports but all except for BOXING! At that point in time I remember the gatherings at my house when there was a Julio Ces One- Rob Provenzano ar Chavez fight, a De La Hoya fight or a Maromero Paez fight. My dad would bring the TV outside, set-up a bunch of chairs, roll out the grill, fire up the mesquite and lay down the marinated carne asada before the first round bell. I remember how much fun those days were and how much pride people had in the Mexican fighters." -Ernesto Yerena Montejano
$323.00
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Nate Duval Alliance of Magicians Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval
Alliance of Magicians Hand-Pulled 2-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2014 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 100 Artwork Size 18x24 Gold Metallic Ink Arrested Development Tribute
$67.00
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Nate Duval Beer Hops Mandala Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval
Beer Hops Mandala 4-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Artwork. 2012 Signed Limited Edition of 125 Artwork Size 18x24 Gold Metallic Ink
$159.00
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Meggs Aquaman No Sea No Life Gold Black Silkscreen Print by Meggs
Aquaman: No Sea, No Life- Gold/Black 2-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Meggs Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. Aquaman: No Sea, No Life" by Meggs 18 x 24 Inches R (Gold/Black): 2-color screen print | Signed & numbered limited edition of 25 "I wanted to re-interpret a mix of the classic & contemporary Aquaman in the form of a worn & well-loved comic book cover. " -Meggs
$256.00
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Matt Dye- Blunt Graffix Captain America Flag Patch HPM Silkscreen Print by Matt Dye- Blunt Graffix
Captain America Flag Patch HPM Silkscreen Print by Matt Dye- Blunt Graffix Hand-Pulled on White Gold Metallic Fine Art Paper Limited Edition Screenprint Artwork. 2014 Signed & Numbered Gold Metallic Embellishments Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print of The Iconic Captain America flag patch worn by actor Peter Fonda in the film Easy Rider sold at auction in 2007 for $89,625. Part of the Art Show "“Beauty of the Beast". Small Skuff to Right Mid Lower Margin. Captain America Flag Patch HPM Silkscreen Print by Matt Dye – Blunt Graffix The Captain America Flag Patch HPM silkscreen print by Matt Dye of Blunt Graffix is a powerful homage to one of the most recognizable artifacts of counterculture history. This limited edition, hand-pulled screenprint, produced in 2014, features gold metallic embellishments on fine art paper, bringing a unique depth and richness to the distressed American flag imagery. The artwork captures the iconic flag patch worn by Peter Fonda in the legendary film Easy Rider, a piece of cinematic history that was later sold at auction in 2007 for $89,625. As part of the "Beauty of the Beast" art show, this silkscreen print embodies the raw energy, rebellion, and freedom associated with both the film and the broader cultural movement it represents. The Visual Composition and Artistic Execution Matt Dye’s artistic approach in this piece highlights the fusion of street pop art & graffiti artwork with a classic American icon. The composition focuses solely on the flag patch, isolated from its original context and magnified to emphasize its texture, wear, and historical significance. The distressed quality of the print reflects the rugged, anti-establishment ethos of Easy Rider, making the flag appear battle-worn and well-traveled. The choice of gold metallic fine art paper adds a stark contrast between the image’s roughness and the refined elegance of its material, reinforcing the idea that rebellion itself can be a form of artistry. The flag’s faded blue and red tones, combined with the visible fraying at the edges, create a sense of imperfection that aligns with the aesthetics of street pop art & graffiti artwork. The imperfections in the flag mirror the imperfections in the counterculture movement, where freedom often came at the cost of conflict and defiance. The use of screenprinting as a medium further enhances this effect, with ink textures and layering techniques adding a raw, handmade quality that mass production could never replicate. The Cultural Symbolism Behind the Artwork The Captain America flag patch from Easy Rider stands as one of the most significant symbols of rebellion in American pop culture. The film itself represented a generation’s disillusionment with authority, the pursuit of personal freedom, and the struggle against societal norms. By isolating this element and transforming it into a piece of street pop art & graffiti artwork, Matt Dye breathes new life into a historical artifact, reframing it within the context of modern artistic movements. The worn and frayed look of the flag patch suggests a deeper commentary on American identity, questioning whether the ideals of freedom and independence remain intact or have become faded over time. The print challenges the viewer to reconsider the flag’s meaning, whether as a symbol of unity, resistance, or defiance. The artistic choice to magnify the patch allows it to be viewed not just as a costume prop but as a relic of countercultural resistance, making it feel relevant in contemporary discussions of freedom, individualism, and political expression. The Impact and Collectibility of the Limited Edition Print With only 50 prints in existence, each signed and numbered by Matt Dye, the Captain America Flag Patch HPM silkscreen print is a rare and highly collectible piece. The 18x24-inch format ensures that the intricate details of the artwork remain visible, from the stitching of the flag to the delicate imperfections in the print. The hand-pulled screenprinting process further enhances the uniqueness of each print, as variations in ink application and texture make every piece one-of-a-kind. Blunt Graffix is known for pushing the boundaries of traditional screenprinting, blending pop culture nostalgia with the raw energy of street pop art & graffiti artwork. This piece stands as a testament to that vision, capturing the essence of a bygone era while keeping its message relevant in contemporary culture. The incorporation of gold metallic embellishments adds an additional layer of depth, making the artwork feel as though it belongs in both an urban setting and a fine art collection. The Captain America Flag Patch HPM silkscreen print is more than just a tribute to Easy Rider—it is a reflection of artistic rebellion, cultural commentary, and the enduring power of visual storytelling. It serves as a reminder that symbols, once worn and weathered, can still hold immense significance, reshaped by the artists who continue to reinterpret them for future generations.
$340.00
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Denial- Daniel Bombardier Covid No 19 Verte Archival Print by Denial- Daniel Bombardier
Covid No 19- Verte Limited Edition Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm MOAB Fine Art Paper by Graffiti Pop Art and Street Artist Denial. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 19 Verte Covid19 Chanel Hand Sanitizer Virus Variant. Numbered, Signed, Stamped on Reverse Archival Pigment Print on MOAB Fine Art Paper 290 GSM Size 18" x 24" Denial’s COVID No. 19: Luxury Branding in the Age of Global Crisis Denial’s COVID No. 19 is a striking archival pigment print released in 2021 as a limited edition of 19, each hand-signed, numbered, and stamped on 290gsm MOAB fine art paper. The work appropriates the form of a Chanel No. 5 perfume bottle, replacing its iconic label with a fictional product name: COVID No. 19 Hand Sanitizer. Rendered with hyper-clean digital precision, the image reconfigures the aesthetics of high fashion to comment on the absurdities of pandemic-era consumerism. The hand sanitizer bottle is presented with all the visual authority of a luxury good, transforming an object of necessity into a parody of status and desire. At the core of this piece is a brutal cultural observation: during a global health emergency, everyday tools of survival—like sanitizer and masks—were elevated to symbols of identity, fashion, and economic access. Denial’s rebranding of Chanel’s perfume into a virus-era commodity confronts this shift head-on. The artwork doesn’t merely lampoon luxury—it reveals how systems of marketing can absorb trauma, repackage it, and sell it back to the public. The Chanel-style labeling is clinical yet elegant, a nod to how visual minimalism often masks corporate manipulation. Commercial Aesthetics as Subversive Weaponry Denial’s artistic strategy centers on the theft and recontextualization of commercial language. With COVID No. 19, the use of vector-sharp line work, realistic light reflections, and exacting product design mimics advertising to the point of deception. This imitation is intentional. The viewer is meant to initially read the image as authentic—something from a fashion magazine or cosmetics campaign—before the irony of the label snaps into focus. The dissonance between form and content invites a critique of the capitalist tendency to aestheticize suffering. This visual methodology ties directly into the ethos of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Denial’s roots in unauthorized public messaging and subcultural image disruption remain present, even as the work exists in a fine art format. The absence of spray drips or rough textures does not diminish the rebellion. Instead, it retools the graphic language of commercial persuasion to undermine itself from within. What looks like a product pitch is, in fact, a visual accusation. The pandemic is not the subject—it is the branding of the pandemic that comes under fire. Street Pop Art as Pandemic Documentation COVID No. 19 operates as both satire and historical record. It captures a cultural moment when survival tools became luxury statements, when scarcity was linked to exclusivity, and when branding extended even to medical supplies. Denial’s artwork speaks to the way modern crises are not only experienced but marketed—how the fear of illness was filtered through the same systems that sell beauty, fashion, and lifestyle. The sanitizer bottle becomes a symbol not of protection, but of consumption. By fusing the iconography of fashion with the reality of a global pandemic, Denial forces the viewer to reconsider the boundaries between design and ethics, branding and survival. The visual simplicity of COVID No. 19 hides a layered indictment of how quickly commercial aesthetics can strip events of meaning. In the tradition of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece turns familiar symbols against themselves, exposing the fragility of culture’s glossy surfaces when confronted with real human urgency.
$313.00
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Raid71 Deadwood AP Giclee Print by Raid71
Deadwood 1-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Metallic Gold Fine Art Paper by Raid71 Rare Street Art Famous Pop Artwork Artist. AP Artist Proof. Skull with western-style Colt pistol guns. This skull and guns design is printed Peregrina majestic real gold ( I assume it’s metallic-esque), measures 45cm x 60 cm and is limited to 10 prints.
$539.00
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Shepard Fairey- OBEY Idiocracy AP Silkscreen Print by Shepard Fairey- OBEY
Idiocracy AP Artist Proof Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Shepard Fairey, Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. AP Artist Proof 2016 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 550 Artwork Size 18x24 Silkscreen Print "I’ve always felt that art, entertainment, and humor can be the best delivery vehicles for social commentary, so I love the way humor is used in “Idiocracy” to make the social critique more digestible. The movie is a harsh but necessary indictment of the anti-intellectual culture and politics that seem to become the norm more and more everyday. The film is great in a cautionary way and has an enjoyable irony being a somewhat low-brow piece of entertainment about the perils of succumbing to a cultural rejection of anything intellectual or high-brow. In other words, the genius of the film is that it may actually get through to the audience it should reach, rather than just preaching to the intellectual elite" -Shepard Fairey- OBEY The "Idiocracy" AP (Artist Proof) silkscreen print by Shepard Fairey is a thought-provoking piece, symbolizing a potent blend of street art ingenuity with biting social commentary. Released as a limited edition in 2016, each piece in the series of 550 is hand-signed and numbered, affirming its exclusivity and value in the art community. Measuring 18x24 inches, this work is meticulously crafted through a 4-color hand-pulled silkscreen process onto fine art paper, a testament to Fairey’s dedication to quality and detail. Shepard Fairey, a trailblazer in the modern pop and street art scene, often infuses his work with social and political subtext. His "Idiocracy" print draws from the satirical film of the same name, utilizing its thematic core as a springboard for his own artistic expression. The movie's critique of a society in intellectual decline resonates with Fairey's own observations of contemporary culture, where anti-intellectualism is increasingly mainstream. Fairey's print channels the film’s irony, using the medium of pop art to comment on the potential dangers of a society that devalues knowledge and critical thinking. Fairey acknowledges the power of art, humor, and entertainment as catalysts for discussion and reflection on societal norms. By embedding these elements into his "Idiocracy" print, he not only captures the essence of the film's warning but also amplifies its message through his unique artistic lens. The print, which features the movie’s signature branding "Brawndo" and the tagline "It's got electrolytes!", satirically suggests that the brain craves not intellectual stimulation but rather a fictional beverage. This piece stands as a cultural artifact within the sphere of graffiti art, encapsulating the genre's inherent confrontation with social issues. Shepard Fairey's work is often characterized by its ability to transcend the boundaries of traditional art spaces, engaging with the public in environments that are unconventional yet visually impactful. The "Idiocracy" AP print continues this trend, marrying the rebellious spirit of street art with the evocative power of cinema to challenge viewers to consider the trajectory of cultural evolution.
$843.00