Inexpensive Artworks

5 artworks

  • Railroad Spike Track Teeth Black Object Art by RD-357 Real Deal

    RD-357 Real Deal Railroad Spike Track Teeth Black Object Art by RD-357 Real Deal

    Railroad Spike Track Teeth Black Object Art by RD-357 Real Deal Original Tag Designer Collectible Pop Artist Artwork. 2021 Original Spray Paint RD Tag on Reclaimed Metal Railroad Spike Art Object Size 6x1 Artwork. Railroad Spike Track Teeth Black by RD-357 – Reclaimed Object in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Railroad Spike Track Teeth Black is a 2021 original artwork by RD-357, also known as Real Deal, a graffiti artist whose work explores the intersection of street authenticity and industrial minimalism. This piece features a reclaimed metal railroad spike measuring 6 x 1 inches, transformed through the addition of RD’s distinct black tag. Executed in spray and marker, the tag cuts across the rusted shaft in a tight, angular form, accented by an arrow pushing forward. This object functions as both a sculptural work and a symbolic message, channeling graffiti’s mobile essence into a handheld relic. The spike—once a mechanical element of motion—becomes the vessel for name-based authorship, connecting the physical infrastructure of rail transit with graffiti’s legacy of distribution, presence, and personal signature. Tag as Sculpture and Object as Surface RD-357’s choice of object echoes graffiti’s foundational principle of using what is available to communicate identity and energy. Unlike traditional street surfaces like walls or doors, this object carries its own embedded story before it is ever painted—steel forged for permanence, wear from transit and time, dents from labor. The tag laid upon it becomes a layer of personality over raw material, marking the spike as no longer industrial but autobiographical. The black line curves through the space with purpose and direction, controlled yet expressive. The arrow flaring from the D propels the tag with motion, continuing graffiti’s tradition of symbolizing flow, travel, and attack. The artist’s use of black ink on a distressed, brown-and-steel base emphasizes legibility and intent, evoking early handstyle culture in its most stripped-down form. Graffiti Culture, Movement, and Found Object Authenticity Railroads have always played a central role in graffiti’s evolution—not only as literal canvases for mobile expression, but as metaphors for movement, rebellion, and connectivity. By placing his tag on a spike rather than a train, RD-357 draws attention to the mechanisms behind motion. This object represents the understructure of transit—what holds tracks together, what enables trains to move, and by extension, what allowed graffiti to gain visibility across cities and boroughs. The object becomes a fragment of cultural infrastructure, repurposed through the graffiti writer’s hand into an artifact of identity. It is as much about claiming authorship as it is about preserving the overlooked materials that define how cities are built and traversed. Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork in Micro Form In the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Railroad Spike Track Teeth Black is a testament to how graffiti can inhabit small-scale objects without losing impact. This piece condenses the energy of a full burner into a six-inch form. It distills namewriting into something tactile and permanent, a tool transformed into a sculpture. As a collectible artifact, it speaks to both the material history of the city and the personal history of the artist. The spike becomes a bridge—between labor and expression, between transportation and authorship, between anonymity and signature. It is graffiti boiled down to one tag, one object, and one gesture—yet it contains the weight of movement, story, and presence.

    $75.00

  • Hexbug Nano Flash 5 Pack Black Art Object Toy by Supreme

    Supreme Hexbug Nano Flash 5 Pack Black Art Object Toy by Supreme

    Supreme Hexbug Nano Flash 5 Pack- Black Limited Edition Designer Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Supreme. Black 2021 FW21

    $140.00

  • Hexbug Nano Flash 5 Pack Red Art Object Toy by Supreme

    Supreme Hexbug Nano Flash 5 Pack Red Art Object Toy by Supreme

    Supreme Hexbug Nano Flash 5 Pack- Red Limited Edition Designer Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti artist Supreme. Red 2021 FW21

    $140.00

  • Railroad Spike Track Teeth Blue Object Art by RD-357 Real Deal

    RD-357 Real Deal Railroad Spike Track Teeth Blue Object Art by RD-357 Real Deal

    Railroad Spike Track Teeth Blue Object Art by RD-357 Real Deal Original Tag Designer Collectible Pop Artist Artwork. 2021 Original Spray Paint RD Tag on Reclaimed Metal Railroad Spike Art Object Size 6x1 Artwork. Railroad Spike Track Teeth Blue by RD-357 – Original Object Art in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Railroad Spike Track Teeth Blue is a 2021 original artwork by RD-357, also known as Real Deal, a graffiti artist and designer known for integrating traditional tagging culture with found-object experimentation. This unique piece features RD’s iconic handstyle tag executed in bright blue spray paint across the surface of a reclaimed railroad spike, measuring 6 x 1 inches. A powerful collision of industrial form and street symbolism, the object retains the weight and texture of its original function while transforming into a three-dimensional graffiti artifact. The signature arrow, a common motif in graffiti letterforms, extends from the letter D, pointing forward with intentional motion—signaling movement, defiance, and direction. As a tagged artifact, this spike not only references the rail systems central to graffiti’s early distribution but becomes a piece of urban archaeology infused with authorship and attitude. Tag Culture and Object as Canvas In graffiti, the tag is the most distilled form of artistic identity. It is name, logo, and signal. RD-357’s application of his tag on a metal spike recontextualizes this signature within the aesthetics of artifact and utility. By placing a clean, fluid handstyle on a corroded and heavy object, the artist plays with contrasts—impermanence marked on permanence, fluid gesture on solid form, gesture on function. The use of blue against the spike’s blackened surface brings a vibrancy and clarity that stands out even on this miniature scale. It becomes a physical message, less about the space it occupies and more about what it carries—a name rooted in street history etched onto a tool once used to anchor systems of transit and division. The object is no longer a spike; it is a signed sculpture, a mobile tag, a symbol of permanence in a culture built on motion. Railroads, Movement, and the Foundation of Style Railroads are more than infrastructure in the graffiti narrative—they are symbols of distribution, escape, and style travel. Writers from the 1970s forward used trains to extend the visibility of their names across boroughs and regions. RD-357 honors that history not with a painting of a train, but with the spike that once fastened steel to wood, that once anchored a system which graffiti artists hijacked to spread messages. This spike is a poetic repurposing. It holds the weight of transit and turns it into voice. It turns the ghost of industrial decay into the object of modern subcultural celebration. The use of an authentic railroad component makes this piece not just art, but a relic transformed—a utilitarian object made iconic by graffiti’s mark of authorship. Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork as Object-Based Language Railroad Spike Track Teeth Blue is a rare example of graffiti object art where the artist refuses to be confined to wall, canvas, or digital format. RD-357 embraces the object as both message and material, infusing his tag with dimension, tactility, and context. This approach bridges graffiti’s traditional emphasis on repetition and surface with the collectible logic of pop and conceptual art. It is a handstyle made sculptural, an industrial artifact made personal, and a name that resists being forgotten. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, such pieces remind us that graffiti lives not only on surfaces we walk past, but also in the objects we carry, the materials we recover, and the symbols we choose to elevate. This work is not merely seen—it is held, it is felt, it is signed in steel.

    $75.00

  • Sket-One Sharpie Chisel Tip by Sket-One

    Sket-One Sket-One Sharpie Chisel Tip by Sket-One

    Sket-One Sharpie Chisel Tip Limited Edition Designer Art Object Collectible Artwork by Artist Sket-One 2022 Single Marker

    $39.00

Inexpensive Artworks

Inexpensive Artworks in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

Inexpensive artworks play a vital role in the ecosystem of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork by providing access to new collectors, supporting emerging artists, and sustaining cultural momentum. These works often come in the form of small edition prints, open run posters, zines, hand-finished minis, and artist-produced merchandise such as stickers or screen-printed patches. Priced affordably, they allow collectors to engage with meaningful contemporary art without the financial barrier that typically accompanies investment grade or blue-chip works. Inexpensive does not equate to lesser value in artistic terms. Many of these pieces carry original ideas, thoughtful design, and emotional resonance. They often serve as first encounters with an artist’s voice and a stepping stone into deeper collecting or engagement with a movement.

Accessibility and Artist Visibility

One of the defining features of inexpensive artworks in this space is their accessibility. Artists like Denial, Shepard Fairey, and Tara McPherson have made efforts to release lower-priced items alongside limited edition prints and original canvases. This democratizes art ownership and builds stronger relationships between artists and their audiences. These works are usually made with the same attention to design and message as their higher-tier counterparts. While the scale or production method may differ, the intention remains consistent. Collectors gain access to authentic visual statements from artists shaping the language of pop culture, protest, and identity. The visibility generated by these accessible works often amplifies artist profiles, supporting their long-term creative trajectory and maintaining the public relevance of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork.

Production Formats and Materials

Inexpensive artworks tend to use straightforward formats such as digital offset printing, hand-pulled mini screenprints, or risograph editions. Materials might include recycled card stock, newsprint, or budget-friendly archival paper. These choices are both economical and conceptually aligned with the aesthetics of street art, which has always thrived on raw surfaces, mass reproduction, and rapid dissemination. Artists may release small studies, early sketches, or hand-signed postcard prints as a way to offer original content at a reduced cost. This production scale maintains intimacy and makes each piece feel personal, even when priced modestly. Collectors often find charm in these smaller, rougher works, viewing them as authentic extensions of an artist’s creative process.

Cultural Value and Collector Engagement

The true value of inexpensive artworks in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork lies in their cultural accessibility. These pieces act as entry points for new collectors, gifts for loyal fans, and tools for spreading visual ideas outside of traditional gallery spaces. They allow art to remain integrated into daily life, unconfined by glass frames or exclusive price points. Whether taped to a wall, pinned to a corkboard, or framed in a small corner of a room, these works carry with them the urgency and immediacy of their origin. They contribute to a broader cultural archive, preserving the spirit of graffiti and pop narrative in a format that is shareable, attainable, and enduring. Inexpensive artworks keep the language of the street alive—circulating it through hands, homes, and hearts without ever compromising the integrity of the message.

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