Green

10 artworks

  • Leonys Martin Old Man Rangers Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Pat Riot Leonys Martin Old Man Rangers Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Leonys Martin/ Old Man- Rangers Unique Hand-Embellished Collage Mixed Media on Vintage Baseball Card by Pat Riot. 2014 Stamped original Mixed Media Layered on Real MLB Topps Vintage Card With Pop Art Like: Leonys Martin/ Old Man- Rangers

    $24.00

  • Fishtucanopus Green Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Nate Duval Fishtucanopus Green Silkscreen Print by Nate Duval

    Fishtucanopus- Green Hand-Pulled 1-Color Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Desirable Artist Nate Duval Limited Edition Pop Art Artwork. 2014 Signed Limited Edition Artwork Size 6x4

    $16.00

  • Corey Kluber Old Miner Indians Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Pat Riot Corey Kluber Old Miner Indians Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Corey Kluber/ Old Miner- Indians Unique Hand-Embellished Collage Mixed Media on Vintage Baseball Card by Pat Riot. 2014 Stamped Original Mixed Media Layered on Real MLB Topps Vintage Card With Pop Art Like: Corey Kluber/ Old Miner- Indians

    $24.00

  • Health Hazards Slap-Up Label Sticker Original Tag Art by Saber Green 1

    Saber Health Hazards Slap-Up Label Sticker Original Tag Art by Saber

    Health Hazards Slap-Up Label Sticker Original Tag Art by Saber Original Permanent Marker Art Drawing on Mailing Glossy Warning Sticker by Graffiti Artist Modern Street Artwork. 2020 Signed Original Slap Up Graffiti Art Tag 4x4 Marker Tagged on Health Flammability Special Instability Hazard  Warning Label Uline S-724 Sticker.  Slap Up In Perfect Condition. Artistic Alchemy on Hazardous Grounds The transformation of ordinary objects into visual spectacles is a hallmark of Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork. In this vein, the "Health Hazards Slap-Up Label Sticker" by Saber, real name Ryan Weston Shook, from the United States, stands out as a captivating fusion of warning label iconography and graffiti artistry. Created in 2020, these pieces symbolize how graffiti artists repurpose everyday items, such as health flammability and particular instability hazard warning label stickers, to make bold statements through art. Saber's original permanent marker art drawings on these glossy arrow stickers testify to the genre's ingenuity and ability to imbue commonplace materials with new life and meaning. Symbolism and Significance in Saber's Work Saber's art on hazard warning stickers is particularly poignant. The stickers' inherent message of caution and danger is juxtaposed with Saber's tags' freeform and expressive nature. This contrast is not merely aesthetic but symbolic, alluding perhaps to the inherent risks and hazards of graffiti creation. In the urban jungle, the graffiti artist is both a creator and a transgressor, and Saber's work captures this duality perfectly. The use of bright, contrasting colors over the hazard symbols does not obscure the warning but instead invites the viewer to reflect on the layers of meaning within the piece. Reflections of 2020 in Street Pop Art 2020 was not just another year in the annals of history but a turning point for societies worldwide. The original slap-up graffiti art tags on these health and hazard stickers by Saber reflect a year marked by global upheaval and a reevaluation of what is considered safe and dangerous. In his 4x4 marker-tagged creations, Saber captures the spirit of an era where the world grappled with health crises and societal instability. By signing each piece, Saber not only claims authorship but also anchors the artwork in time and place, offering a permanent marker — literally and figuratively — of a moment in time through the lens of Street Pop Art and Graffiti Artwork.

    $16.00

  • Ty Cobb Dapper Thinking Tigers Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Pat Riot Ty Cobb Dapper Thinking Tigers Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Ty Cobb/ Dapper Thinking- Tigers Unique Hand-Embellished Collage Mixed Media on Vintage Baseball Card by Pat Riot. 2014 Stamped Original Mixed Media Layered on Real MLB Topps Vintage Card With Pop Art Like: Ty Cobb/ Dapper Thinking- Tigers

    $24.00

  • Jed Lowrie Surprise Face Athletics Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Pat Riot Jed Lowrie Surprise Face Athletics Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Jed Lowrie/ Surprise Face- Athletics Unique Hand-Embellished Collage Mixed Media on Vintage Baseball Card by Pat Riot. 2014 Stamped original Mixed Media Layered on Real MLB Topps Vintage Card With Pop Art Like: Jed Lowrie/ Surprise Face- Athletics

    $24.00

  • Kuma OG Chase Flocked Amarillo Verde Prisoner Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Luke Chueh Kuma OG Chase Flocked Amarillo Verde Prisoner Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Kuma OG Chase Flocked Amarillo Verde The Prisoner Drug Bear Kickstarter Art Toy by Luke Chueh Limited Edition Vinyl Collectible Artwork by Street Graffiti Artist. 2017 Limited Edition Artwork of 62 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 Chase Flocked Edition. Kuma OG Chase Flocked Amarillo Verde The Prisoner by Luke Chueh: Ultra Rare Emotional Artifact in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Kuma OG Chase Flocked Amarillo Verde The Prisoner is an ultra rare vinyl art toy by Luke Chueh, released in 2017 as a Kickstarter exclusive. Limited to only 62 pieces, this special edition is a flocked version of the Amarillo Verde Kuma OG figure, making it one of the most sought-after variants in The Prisoner series. Packaged in a green translucent prescription-style container with printed labeling, cotton interior, and protective bag, the figure mimics both the aesthetic and implication of medical confinement. The Prisoner, originally based on Chueh’s emotionally resonant painting, contemplates psychological, physical, and pharmaceutical imprisonment. Rendered in a mossy textured green flocking, the bear’s soft tactile surface contrasts dramatically with its somber pose—arms wrapped tightly around its knees, seated and emotionally closed off. This contrast emphasizes the disconnect between exterior softness and internal suffering, a hallmark of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Flocking as Texture for Trauma and Visual Irony What distinguishes this edition is the flocking—a velvety texture that adds an uncanny softness to an otherwise emotionally heavy piece. This tactile surface transforms the object into something that feels almost comforting to touch, even while it visually portrays pain, dependency, and confinement. The figure’s colorway, a vivid Amarillo Verde green, echoes the medical cannabis dispensary aesthetic, subtly referencing alternative forms of chemical escape. The labeled container marks the strain as Kuma OG, a fictionalized nod to both cannabis culture and the ongoing dialogue around self-medication. By placing the bear in a tube labeled as a product and strain, Chueh uses humor and stark visual metaphors to dissect how trauma and emotional pain are commodified. These layered meanings, delivered through minimalist sculptural forms and smart packaging, place this piece firmly within the canon of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Luke Chueh’s Quiet Revolution in Designer Art Toys Luke Chueh, a Los Angeles-based artist known for his distinctive character design and emotional storytelling, has redefined the role of designer toys in contemporary art. His work draws heavily from personal experiences with mental health, cultural identity, and psychological conflict. The bear figure featured in The Prisoner series is a signature motif that Chueh uses to convey raw, unspoken emotion. Through posture and minimal expression, the bear becomes an avatar for the fragile states people often endure in silence. This flocked version adds an additional layer of irony and depth, turning a painful emotional narrative into a soft and seemingly huggable object. Chueh’s fusion of toy design, sculpture, and emotional realism continues to influence the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork movement by proving that vulnerability can be conveyed through the smallest, most deceptively simple forms. Kickstarter Exclusivity and Cultural Significance As one of only 62 pieces produced, the Kuma OG Chase Flocked Amarillo Verde edition holds exceptional cultural and collector value. Its release through Kickstarter ties the work directly to the support of fans and collectors who align with the deeper message of The Prisoner series. The prescription-themed packaging serves as more than a protective shell—it is part of the narrative structure, symbolizing institutional control, pharmaceutical normalization, and the quiet despair of chemically managed pain. This edition does not just exist as a display item; it exists as a statement. It represents the intersection of mental health, medication culture, and consumer aesthetics in modern society. Within the framework of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Luke Chueh’s limited editions become small-scale monuments to the emotional complexity of human experience—objects of art that carry as much weight in meaning as they do in cultural presence.

    $500.00

  • Ron Hunt Retro Man Expos Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Pat Riot Ron Hunt Retro Man Expos Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Ron Hunt/ Retro Man- Expos Unique Hand-Embellished Collage Mixed Media on Vintage Baseball Card by Pat Riot. 2014 Stamped Original Mixed Media Layered on Real MLB Topps Vintage Card With Pop Art Like: Ron Hunt/ Retro Man- Expos

    $24.00

  • Colby Lewis Astronaut Rangers Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Pat Riot Colby Lewis Astronaut Rangers Original Collage Baseball Card Art by Pat Riot

    Colby Lewis/ Astronaut- Rangers Unique Hand-Embellished Collage Mixed Media on Vintage Baseball Card by Pat Riot. 2014 Stamped Original Mixed Media Layered on Real MLB Topps Vintage Card With Pop Art Like: Colby Lewis/ Astronaut- Rangers

    $24.00

  • Kuma OG Amarillo Verde The Prisoner Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Luke Chueh Kuma OG Amarillo Verde The Prisoner Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh

    Kuma OG The Prisoner Amarillo Verde Drug Bear Art Toy by Luke Chueh Limited Edition Vinyl Collectible Artwork by Street Graffiti Artist. 2017 Limited Edition Artwork of 438 with Cotton, Bag, and Tube. Based on Luke Chueh's original painting, The Prisoner ponders captivity in its many forms—physical, mental, or pharmaceutical. Post-traumatic stress disorder is a mental health problem that can develop after experiencing or witnessing a life-threatening event like combat, natural disaster, car accident, or sexual assault. And the dependency on prescription medications such as Percocet has led to widespread addiction problems. Kuma OG The Prisoner Amarillo Verde by Luke Chueh: Vinyl Expression of Emotional Confinement in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Kuma OG The Prisoner Amarillo Verde is a limited edition vinyl art toy created in 2017 by Luke Chueh, a Los Angeles-based artist known for blending dark emotional themes with clean, accessible design. This version of The Prisoner was produced in a run of 438 pieces and includes a cotton-lined pouch and a green prescription-style tube container, enhancing the toy’s commentary on medication, dependency, and the struggles of mental health. Inspired by Chueh’s original painting, The Prisoner represents a bear-like character locked in a pose of despair, hugging its knees with its head down. This green vinyl edition, subtitled Amarillo Verde, extends the series’ reflection on the psychological entrapment many face as a result of trauma and modern pharmaceutical culture, while contributing to the visual language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Pharmaceutical Symbolism and Emotional Language in a Vinyl Medium The Amarillo Verde colorway gives the piece a sterile, medicinal aesthetic, reinforced by its packaging in a translucent green prescription tube labeled with strain-like language. This not only ties the figure to the pharmaceutical world but also alludes to cannabis and alternative coping mechanisms. The bear's static, slumped position communicates resignation and detachment. Its form is simplified, yet every aspect—from its curved arms to its averted gaze—projects a vivid emotional landscape. The figure is not anthropomorphic in a traditional sense, but its expression is intensely human. By enclosing the figure in a mock prescription container, the artwork draws attention to how society addresses psychological pain: through containment and sedation, rather than resolution. Luke Chueh’s choice to use vinyl as the medium makes the figure both durable and intimate, offering a tactile presence that underscores its emotional weight. Luke Chueh and the Visual Narrative of Pain and Isolation Luke Chueh is a central figure in the art toy movement and Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, using deceptively cute characters to explore profound emotional realities. Born in the United States, Chueh’s art frequently tackles depression, trauma, and the tension between inner life and external perception. The Prisoner series is a cornerstone of his commentary on mental health and pharmaceutical culture. This particular Amarillo Verde edition communicates a very specific kind of sadness—the kind masked by colorful pills and simplified diagnoses. It is deeply rooted in Chueh’s personal narrative and broader societal critique. The bear figure, repeated throughout his work, becomes an avatar for voiceless suffering, sitting quietly in its confinement, waiting for acknowledgment. This toy, though minimal in form, is maximal in meaning and speaks to the ability of street and pop artists to address contemporary crises through minimal, emotionally potent sculpture. The Prisoner as a Physical Object in the Vocabulary of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Kuma OG The Prisoner Amarillo Verde stands as a tactile commentary on mental health in an era of chemical coping. Each vinyl piece is packaged not only with care but with thematic intent—every element, from the labeling to the green plastic tube, reinforces the work’s conceptual core. It mirrors the experience of being prescribed and contained, offering a toy that acts as a physical artifact of emotional incarceration. It is not simply a figure to be displayed, but one to be felt and contemplated. Through his work, Luke Chueh continues to redefine how sculpture and collectible art can serve as powerful mediums for psychological expression. Within the evolving canon of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece asserts that the most minimal forms often hold the deepest truths, inviting collectors and viewers to sit with the discomfort and recognize its weight.

    $320.00

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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