Green

23 artworks

  • Temper Tot 10th Year Commemoration Giclee Print by Ron English

    Ron English- POPaganda Temper Tot 10th Year Commemoration Giclee Print by Ron English- POPaganda

    Temper Tot Wynwood Walls 10th Year Commemoration Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Cold Press Acid-Free 100% Cotton Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Ron English- POPaganda. EDITION OF 75 Signed and numbered by the artist, 2015 10” x 18” Archival Giclee print on Cold Press Acid-Free 100% Cotton Paper / 305 gsm / 200lb Published by Goldman Global Arts, Miami. 8” x 16” with 2" borders on Archival Giclee print on Cold Press Acid-Free 100% Cotton Paper / 305 gsm / 200lb

    $371.00

  • Up From the Well Giclee Print by Victo Ngai

    Victo Ngai Up From the Well Giclee Print by Victo Ngai

    Up From the Well Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Fine Art Print on heavy 290gsm Natural White Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Victo Ngai. January 28, 2014 Originally commissioned by This American Life to celebrate their 500th episode. Up From The Well is an edition of 250 prints by Victo Ngai. With a small border for framing, the print is sized to fit a standard 8" by 10" frame. The artwork has been printed on a heavy 290gsm natural white paper. Due to how this artwork was made and stored by the artist, many of Ngai's older prints contain slight yellowing to the extreme upper and lower white margin that extends about 1mm. This does not effect the image at all and the prints are perfect besides this.

    $262.00

  • Iron Skin Grin Battle Damage Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Ron English- POPaganda Iron Skin Grin Battle Damage Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Iron Skin Grin- Battle Damage Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by Artists Ron English- POPaganda x Made By Monsters 2021 Stamped/Printed Limited Edition of 500- Grin Smiley Boba Fett Star Wars with Battle Damage Colorway Pop Art Series. Displayed With Bag Ron English – Iron Skin Grin Battle Damage in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Iron Skin Grin – Battle Damage is a limited edition vinyl art toy created in 2021 by Ron English in collaboration with Made by Monsters, released as part of his larger POPaganda universe. Limited to just 500 pieces, this collectible features a stylized, battle-worn version of Boba Fett, reimagined through English’s iconic Grin series. With detailed helmet dents, bold color blocking, and the unmistakable skeletal grin visible beneath the visor, this piece fuses fan culture with subversive street aesthetics. It’s not just a figure—it’s a commentary on icon worship, war culture, and the plastic mythology of modern America, all through the lens of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. This figure belongs to Ron English’s long-running exploration of pop culture distortion. The Grin motif—a skeletal smile embedded within famous characters—is used here to deconstruct the legendary Star Wars bounty hunter. English does not merely replicate Boba Fett, he fractures him. By inserting the skull-teeth grin and painting damage onto the armor, English forces a conversation about what lies beneath the mythology of heroism and violence. It turns a beloved sci-fi figure into an eerie effigy of consumer nostalgia—and critique. Star Wars Meets Graffiti Mutant Aesthetic Street Pop Art thrives on remix culture, and Ron English’s Iron Skin Grin figure exemplifies this approach. It pulls from one of the most commercially successful narratives in American media—Star Wars—and injects it with graffiti-born irreverence and symbolic decay. The character design retains its pop appeal: clean vinyl, bold lines, slick finishes. But the injection of the Grin skull beneath the mask mutates Boba Fett into something uncanny, almost undead. The figure's sculpted dents and wear patterns mimic real combat damage, which juxtapose perfectly against the cartoonish structure and toy-grade polish. This creates tension between authenticity and illusion—between the glorified violence of media icons and the real consequences of power and identity. That’s where the graffiti logic kicks in: take what’s familiar, mark it, break it, and remake it with your own truth. Vinyl Collectibles as Subversive Street Sculpture Ron English’s vinyl toys, including Iron Skin Grin, are direct descendants of street art’s rebellious spirit. These figures are made for shelves, but they speak with the voice of murals, stencils, and tags. Each figure is essentially a 3D print of a philosophy—accessible in form, but densely layered with cultural critique. Much like a throw-up on a corporate billboard or a wheatpasted poster of a politician’s distorted face, these vinyl sculptures take dominant narratives and twist them into satire. This collectible is also part of a growing tradition where designer toys become artifacts of graffiti culture’s evolution—portable street sculptures for a post-graffiti world. Ron English, alongside artists like Sket-One and KAWS (Brian Donnelly), helped shape this fusion between character design, political parody, and collectible art, showing that street-level energy can thrive within manufactured form factors. POPaganda and the Weaponized Smile The Iron Skin Grin – Battle Damage figure is deeply embedded in Ron English’s POPaganda series—his personal art universe where capitalism, consumerism, and pop mythology are both celebrated and deconstructed. The Grin characters are central to this universe, each one a cracked mask that reveals the hollow laughter beneath American pop culture. By giving Boba Fett the Grin, English rewires the character’s mystique into something more sinister: a consumer product shaped by violence, nostalgia, and the endless hunger of fandom. This makes Iron Skin Grin more than a toy. It’s a miniature revolution—a physical embodiment of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork’s mission to expose the glossy surfaces of culture and show what’s really grinning underneath. Through this vinyl figure, Ron English again proves that subversion can wear armor, carry a blaster, and still smirk at the system that made it legendary.

    $450.00

  • Temper Tot Mad Lad Pose Art Toy by Ron English

    Ron English- POPaganda Temper Tot Mad Lad Pose Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Temper Tot- Mad Lad Pose Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by pop modern artist Ron English- POPaganda. Ron English- POPaganda Temper Tot 10” figure: Mad Lad Pose. Everyone’s favorite Angry Baby is back, bigger and madder than ever! The open edition colorway features the classic green body and blue pants. English coined the term POPaganda to describe his signature mash-up of high and low cultural touchstones, from superhero mythology to totems of art history, populated with his vast and constantly growing arsenal of original characters.

    $264.00

  • Quetzal Archival Print by Stinkfish

    Stinkfish Quetzal Archival Print by Stinkfish

    Quetzal Limited Edition Archival Pigment Prints on 330gsm Fine Art Paper by Stinkfish Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. "The piece is based on a photo that I took in a gypsy neighborhood "Zorroza" at the city of Bilbao (Spain) last year in May. The following year I was painting a wall with my friend Malk, when a lot of kids come to us to ask about the wall and play around. At the end the whole family was around us, one of the members of the family was this little girl with these powerful eyes and a really special and strange energy." - Stinkfish

    $352.00

  • Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Luke Chueh Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Flocked Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh Kickstarter Limited Edition Vinyl Collectible Artwork by Street Graffiti Artist. 2018 Limited Edition Artwork of 93 with Cotton, Bag, and Tube. Based on Luke Chueh's original painting, The Prisoner ponders captivity in its many forms: physical, mental, or pharmaceutical. Ultra Rare Kickstarter Exclusive Extra Large XL 6 Inch Edition. Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear by Luke Chueh: Sculpting Emotional Confinement in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Kush XL 6in The Prisoner Drug Bear by Luke Chueh is a 2018 Kickstarter exclusive collectible, limited to just 93 pieces worldwide. This rare extra-large vinyl edition transforms Chueh’s signature bear into a more physically imposing yet equally vulnerable presence. At six inches tall and flocked in vibrant green, the figure sits hunched and withdrawn, arms wrapped tightly around its knees, tucked into a gesture of protective silence. This version is packaged inside a deep green prescription-style plastic tube, labeled under the fictional strain Kuma OG. Accompanied by a cotton-lined pouch and official labeling, the toy carries the visual weight of both clinical control and emotional solitude. As a part of the wider Prisoner series, this XL edition expands Luke Chueh’s ongoing critique of psychological and pharmaceutical confinement through the visual language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Material and Scale as Tools of Conceptual Impact The use of scale in the Kush XL version heightens the emotional potency of the figure. Unlike the smaller editions, which evoke delicacy and intimacy, this larger size commands more physical space, forcing viewers to confront the quiet suffering it represents. The flocked green surface adds a layer of visual contradiction, inviting touch while symbolizing the lush appearance of calm that often hides distress. The presentation in a prescription tube references the aesthetics of cannabis dispensaries and pharmaceutical packaging, placing the bear in the middle of society’s ongoing conversation about medication, trauma management, and alternative therapy. The prescription-style label contextualizes the bear as both patient and product, surrounded by the implied control of dosage, labeling, and clinical oversight. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this kind of object challenges assumptions about what healing looks like and critiques the systems that monetize emotional relief. Luke Chueh and the Emotional Vocabulary of Toy-Based Street Pop Art Luke Chueh is a California-based artist known for using deceptively simple characters to convey deeply nuanced emotional states. His bear, a now-iconic symbol within his work, is never neutral. Whether painted or sculpted, it is always in the middle of a silent, internal dialogue. The Prisoner figure exemplifies Chueh’s practice of using posture, minimalism, and context to explore themes like depression, anxiety, addiction, and isolation. The Kush XL edition does not stray from these themes; rather, it amplifies them through texture and size. Chueh’s work belongs firmly within the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork canon, not only for its visual accessibility but also for its bold engagement with contemporary mental health struggles. The bear is at once relatable and haunting, caught between comfort and despair, between treatment and dependency. The Prisoner as a Sculptural Statement on Mental Health and Control Kush XL 6in The Prisoner is more than a collectible art toy—it is a sculptural representation of cultural truth. Limited to just 93 Kickstarter-exclusive editions, it holds significant value for collectors, not only due to its rarity but because of its raw, unfiltered emotional messaging. The packaging is not ornamental. It is part of the narrative, reinforcing the figure’s status as a symbol of medicated containment. The green colorway and dispensary-themed label introduce a layered commentary about the growing normalization of cannabis as both relief and crutch, expanding Chueh’s critique beyond pharmaceuticals alone. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, the figure functions like a street mural in miniature form—portable, powerful, and socially conscious. With this XL edition, Luke Chueh elevates designer toys into platforms for mental health discourse, using vinyl, flocking, and form to hold a mirror to both personal vulnerability and systemic response.

    $750.00

  • Sale -15% Cup & Brushes Original Ceramic Sculpture by Joshua Vides

    Joshua Vides Cup & Brushes Original Ceramic Sculpture by Joshua Vides

    Cup & Brushes Original Ceramic Hand Painted Sculpture by Joshua Vides Shattered Dreams Series Artwork by Graffiti Street Artist. 2023 Signed Original Hand-Made Sculpture One of A Kind Ceramic & Acrylic Paint Artwork Size 3x10 BMW Car Logo on Tall Slim Cup with Paintbrushes in It That Have Been Used With Colorful Paint Statue. Cup & Brushes by Joshua Vides: Handcrafted Commentary in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Cup & Brushes is a 2023 original ceramic sculpture by Joshua Vides, hand-painted and sculpted as a one-of-a-kind piece within his Shattered Dreams series. Standing at 10 inches tall and 3 inches wide, the sculpture is composed of ceramic and acrylic paint, presenting a stylized painter’s cup filled with color-dipped brushes. The object is marked with a distorted BMW logo, rendered with Vides’ signature black-and-white linework and cartoonish imperfection. The result is a satirical fusion of commercial branding and art studio realism, executed in static ceramic form but resonating with the vibrant and disruptive energy of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The sculpture immediately strikes as an everyday object captured in transition. The tall, slim cup mimics a standard plastic or glass container typically found in a working artist’s space, now elevated to ceramic permanence. Inside it, five brushes—each dipped in a different primary color—rise with varying angles and tips, frozen mid-use. Paint splatters decorate the brush handles, hinting at past action, movement, and human presence. The BMW logo appears deliberately imprecise, drawn with an uneven hand, suggesting critique or humor rather than admiration. Vides transforms corporate symbolism into a malleable texture, destabilizing its glossy authority by recontextualizing it within the raw environment of creative labor. Material Tension and Visual Commentary Joshua Vides is known for his ability to distort reality through sculptural forms that look like sketches, flattening three-dimensional objects into cartoon-like representations. In Cup & Brushes, that visual illusion is secondary to texture and concept. The glossy ceramic surfaces are accented with drips, smudges, and brush marks, celebrating the mess of making while pointing to the polished image culture that often erases labor. By painting a luxury car logo onto a utilitarian cup used for cleaning brushes, Vides creates a sharp contrast between aspiration and effort, between consumer fantasy and creative reality. This kind of visual subversion is central to Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Vides uses the physicality of the sculpture to question the perceived value of brand versus process. The brushes, often overlooked tools in the creation of spectacle, become the spectacle themselves. The cup—humble and functional—now becomes a pedestal for critique. By freezing a studio scene in ceramic, Vides invites viewers to consider what is glorified and what is hidden behind polished design and global branding. Joshua Vides and the Language of Line in Three Dimensions Joshua Vides has become internationally recognized for his monochromatic comic-style transformations of everyday objects, environments, and fashion collaborations. While many of his installations utilize hard lines and sharp contrast to simulate two-dimensionality, Cup & Brushes allows texture, color, and volume to take center stage. It represents a matured shift in his practice—one where he does not rely on flat outlines but instead builds emotional and cultural critique through object and form. The Shattered Dreams series, from which this sculpture originates, is an ongoing exploration of how ambition, identity, and artistic purpose interact with capitalism and brand loyalty. The BMW emblem, distorted and casually placed, functions as a stand-in for broader themes of consumption and the dream of success. The sculpture implies that behind every polished brand lies a messy cup of brushes—used, dipped, stained, and repurposed in pursuit of creative expression. Cup & Brushes as Static Protest and Artistic Tribute Cup & Brushes is more than a still-life tribute to tools—it is a sculptural poem about the invisible effort behind visual culture. It challenges the viewer to look past the logo, past the clean gallery space, and into the workspace of the artist, where objects are not sacred until they are signed, not valued until they are sold. Joshua Vides brings this tension to the surface, capturing it in ceramic and sealing it in the aesthetics of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. This sculpture stands as a reminder that even luxury begins in labor, and that every mark of paint holds a story worth sculpting.

    $1,782.00 $1,515.00

  • Liberty Girl Freedom Polystone Sculpture by Brandalised

    Brandalism & Brandalised Liberty Girl Freedom Polystone Sculpture by Brandalised

    Liberty Girl- Freedom Polystone Sculpture Limited Edition Artwork by Artist Brandalised of Pop Graffiti Painting & Street Art Fame. 10" Tall Donning an iconic green do, the second colorway of the popular Liberty Girl wears its inspirations on its sleeves. Standing on a box and picking her nose, Liberty Girl displays childish arrogance in her play for liberty. Don't miss your chance to own this remarkable piece of art that is now immortalized as a special edition Polystone figure. Comes With Unburnt Spray Can Candle.

    $651.00

  • Daydreaming II Giclee Print by Alex Garant

    Alex Garant Daydreaming II Giclee Print by Alex Garant

    Daydreaming II Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Alex Garant. 2018 Signed Limited Edition Print Artwork Size 8x10

    $103.00

  • Misty Moss Gorge Giclee Print by Nicole Gustafsson

    Nicole Gustafsson Misty Moss Gorge Giclee Print by Nicole Gustafsson

    Misty Moss Gorge Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Fine Art Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Nicole Gustafsson.

    $103.00

  • The Other Mandalorian Giclee Print by Patrick Connan

    Patrick Connan The Other Mandalorian Giclee Print by Patrick Connan

    The Other Mandalorian Limited Edition Giclee Print on Fine Art Paper by Patrick Connan counter-culture street artist art. Giclee print on Fine Art Paper (Hahnemühle German Etching) 310 GSM 8" x 10" Signed / Numbered & Stamped

    $103.00

  • ABC Camo Basketball Art Object by Bape- A Bathing Ape

    Bape- A Bathing Ape ABC Camo Basketball Art Object by Bape- A Bathing Ape

    ABC Camo Ball Limited Edition Exclusive Real Basketball Sports Art Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Bape- A Bathing Ape. 2021 ABC Camo Ball Art Basketball

    $280.00

  • Hand Cut Alphabet Multi Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Hand Cut Alphabet Multi Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Hand Cut Alphabet- Multi Hand-Pulled 4-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2014 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 35 Artwork Size 7.75x10

    $27.00

  • Unicorn Man Giclee Print by Mike Mitchell

    Mike Mitchell Unicorn Man Giclee Print by Mike Mitchell

    Unicorn Man Limited Edition Giclee Print on Fine Art Paper by Mike Mitchell counter-culture street artist art. 2014 Signed & Numbered Limited edition of 100 Artwork Size 8x10 Man Nude with Unicorn Horn Thinking Giclee Print by Mike Mitchell Unicorn Man in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Unicorn Man, a limited edition giclee print by Mike Mitchell, exemplifies the artist’s signature fusion of humor, surrealism, and contemporary pop art. Released in 2014 as a signed and numbered edition of 100, this artwork encapsulates the whimsy and satire characteristic of modern street pop art. With its clean lines, soft pastel color palette, and absurd yet contemplative subject, the piece challenges conventional artistic norms while making a statement about self-perception and fantasy in everyday life. The Playful Absurdity of the Image Unicorn Man depicts a seated, nude male figure in a tranquil, meditative pose. The subject’s chubby physique, childlike facial features, and small mustache add a comedic and endearing quality to the character. The most striking element, however, is the unicorn horn protruding from his forehead, glistening with sparkles and blending into the character’s soft golden hair. A small unicorn tail further reinforces the mythical transformation, subtly suggesting that this figure, despite his mundane humanity, sees himself as something more magical. Mike Mitchell’s work often highlights the absurd in a way that is both humorous and strangely thought-provoking. Unicorn Man is no exception. By placing an otherwise ordinary man into an extraordinary context, the piece questions notions of identity, self-acceptance, and the need for escapism. Street pop art frequently uses such exaggerated depictions to engage audiences in a playful yet meaningful dialogue about modern life. Stylistic Elements and Pop Surrealism The composition of Unicorn Man adheres to the principles of pop surrealism, a movement that blends elements of pop culture with dreamlike or nonsensical imagery. The clean, almost cartoon-like lines reflect a highly polished digital aesthetic, a common trait in contemporary street pop art. The limited color palette, dominated by warm beige and soft pink hues, lends a gentle and inviting quality to the artwork, making the character appear approachable despite the oddity of his transformation. Mitchell’s signature style involves a combination of illustration techniques that evoke nostalgia while maintaining a modern edge. The flat, bold colors and expressive simplicity of the figure create a sense of immediacy, making the artwork easily digestible yet layered with deeper meaning. The dreamlike glow surrounding the unicorn horn emphasizes the surreal nature of the character’s self-perception, drawing the viewer into his imagined world. Symbolism and Cultural Commentary Unicorn Man extends beyond visual humor and enters the realm of cultural commentary. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, fantasy is often used as a means of questioning reality. The figure’s peaceful, meditative pose suggests an acceptance of his unique identity, no matter how absurd it may seem to others. This could symbolize the struggle for self-expression and individuality in a world that often demands conformity. The unicorn itself has long been associated with purity, magic, and unattainable ideals. By juxtaposing this mythical symbolism with an everyday human figure, the piece highlights the tension between aspiration and reality. It suggests that everyone, in their own way, harbors a desire to be seen as extraordinary, even if that fantasy exists only in their own mind. The Enduring Appeal of Unicorn Man Unicorn Man continues to captivate collectors and fans of contemporary pop art due to its blend of whimsy, satire, and thought-provoking themes. The limited edition nature of the print makes it a highly sought-after piece within the street pop art and graffiti artwork communities. Mike Mitchell’s ability to infuse humor with artistic sophistication ensures that his work remains relevant and engaging. This artwork stands as a reminder that creativity thrives in the unexpected. By merging the ridiculous with the serene, Unicorn Man invites viewers to embrace their inner absurdities and find magic in the mundane. Whether seen as a lighthearted character or a deeper metaphor for self-perception, the piece reinforces the power of street pop art to challenge perspectives while making people smile.

    $121.00

  • ABC Camo Soccerball Art Object by Bape- A Bathing Ape

    Bape- A Bathing Ape ABC Camo Soccerball Art Object by Bape- A Bathing Ape

    ABC Camo Ball Limited Edition Exclusive Real Soccerball Sports Art Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Bape- A Bathing Ape. 2021 ABC Camo Soccerball Art Object by Bape- A Bathing Ape New In Box

    $231.00

  • Alphabet Green Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Alphabet Green Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Alphabet- Green 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 8x10 Marked #1 of the run.

    $27.00

  • Together Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    John Vogl Together Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    Together Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by John Vogl Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 8 x 10 inches. Four screens on French Speckletone cover. Signed and numbered edition of 180. Released 28 November 2014.

    $103.00

  • 434344 Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    John Vogl 434344 Silkscreen Print by John Vogl

    434344 Limited Edition 4-Color Hand-Pulled Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by John Vogl Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. 8 x 10 inches. Four screens on French Speckletone cover. Signed and numbered edition of 175. Released 28 November 2014.

    $103.00

  • Business Cat Green AP Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Business Cat Green AP Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Business Cat- Green AP Artist Proof Hand-Pulled 4-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. AP Artist Proof 2014 Signed & Marked AP Limited Edition Artwork Size 8x10

    $70.00

  • Hooray Coffee Teal Green AP Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Hooray Coffee Teal Green AP Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Hooray Coffee- Teal Green- AP Artist Proof Hand-Pulled 3-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. AP Artist Proof 2014 Signed & Marked AP Limited Edition Artwork Size 8x10

    $29.00

  • Skull Bomb Plus Sculpture by Jason Freeny

    Jason Freeny Skull Bomb Plus Sculpture by Jason Freeny

    Skull Bomb Plus Limited Edition Polystone Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Jason Freeny. Staying true to its military roots, this Skull Bomb comes painted in rich shades of camouflage. Inspiration was drawn from the history of aerial warfare where camouflage has long served an integral part of combat. In line with an enduring military tradition, it comes emblazoned with a distinctive nose art – an illustrated set of teeth and emphasizes prominence from the uniformity of the military.

    $256.00

  • Monkey Elephant Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Monkey Elephant Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Monkey Elephant Hand-Pulled 4-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2014 Signed Limited Edition Artwork Size 8x8

    $27.00

  • Hand Cut Alphabet Green Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Hand Cut Alphabet Green Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Hand Cut Alphabet- Green 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 35 Artwork Size 7.75x10

    $27.00

Green

Emerald Tones: The Use of Green in Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork

Green's Emergence in Urban Visual Culture

Green, the color of nature and rebirth, has made a significant leap from the natural world into the urban jungle, asserting its presence within street pop art and graffiti artwork. As a color, green has the unique ability to convey a wide range of emotions and messages, from tranquility and growth to envy and vigor. Within street pop and graffiti, green is not just a color; it's a statement. It brings a piece of the natural world into the often stark, concrete environment of the city, providing a stark contrast that can breathe life into inanimate structures and surfaces. 

Technical Aspects of Green in Street Artistry

The technical application of green in urban art is as varied as the shades it can take on. In street pop art, green can be found in everything from the bright lime greens that scream for attention to the muted olive tones that suggest sophistication and earthiness. Graffiti artists favor the color for its ability to set a mood. Green can ground a piece with a sense of calmness or give it an edge of vibrancy. The particular hue selected can significantly affect the artwork's interaction with light and its surrounding environment, influencing how the work is perceived by its audience. 

Green as a Cultural Signifier in Art

Culturally, green carries a wealth of significance that street and pop artists tap into. It's a color that can represent political movements, environmental activism, and social change. In street pop and graffiti art, green is often employed to draw connections to these themes, leveraging its cultural capital to amplify a message or cause. This symbolism is preserved in the audience; green can trigger a recognition of and engagement with the artwork's deeper narrative.

Color Dynamics: Green in Composition

In terms of color dynamics, green holds a place of versatility. It can harmonize or clash within a composition, depending on its application. The color theory utilized by street pop and graffiti artists often incorporates green to either blend seamlessly with other natural tones or to stand out against a complementary backdrop, such as red or orange. In compositions where green is used alongside shades of blue, a sense of tranquility and naturalism is often evoked. In contrast, its use of yellows can create an energizing and lively effect.

The Symbolism and Utility of Green in Urban Art

The symbolism of green in urban art stretches beyond its visual appeal. It is a valuable color, often used to create a sense of space and depth in a piece. Its various shades can add dimension and the illusion of texture, which is particularly useful in the flat surfaces that are typical canvases for street artists. Furthermore, green has an innate ability to draw the eye, serving as a focal point or a means to direct the viewer's attention to specific elements within the artwork.

Green in the Future of Street and Pop Art

As we look to the future of street pop art and graffiti, green's role seems poised to become even more prominent. With increasing awareness of environmental issues, green has become a color of advocacy—a visual call to arms. The continued use of green in urban art reflects not only aesthetic preferences but also a collective consciousness that resonates with contemporary concerns. Its application across murals, installations, and standalone pieces will likely evolve. Still, the message of green will remain clear: it is a color of life, thought, and the ever-present relationship between the urban and the natural. In every shade, from neon to forest, green in street pop art and graffiti artwork is a bridge between worlds. It is a reminder of the organic within the manufactured, a splash of vitality on the grey canvas of the city. Its application is as thoughtful as it is impactful, with each hue selected for its ability to communicate, to stand out, and to represent the myriad ideas that green encapsulates. Whether it whispers of growth or shouts of change, green is a color that demands to be seen and considered within the broader palette of urban expression.
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