Jermaine Rogers

1 artwork

  • Sale -40% Damaged Bear 72 Original Marker Drawing by Jermaine Rogers

    Jermaine Rogers Damaged Bear 72 Original Marker Drawing by Jermaine Rogers

    Damaged Bear 72 Original Color Marker Drawing by Jermaine Rogers on Wove Fine Art Paper Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2007 Signed Original Marker Ink Drawing Size 6.5x10. "Something is very wrong with me: I am falling apart...'" Damaged Bear 72 by Jermaine Rogers – Psychological Symbolism in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Damaged Bear 72 is a 2007 original marker ink drawing by American artist Jermaine Rogers, executed on wove fine art paper and measuring 6.5 x 10 inches. Signed by the artist, the piece is an emotionally raw and visually haunting entry in Rogers’s ongoing exploration of vulnerability, identity, and collapse. The drawing features a wide-eyed bear figure rendered in loose, expressive linework with patches of red that appear as wounds or signs of decay. Numbered 72 on its forehead and accompanied by hand-lettered text reading Something is very wrong with me: I am falling apart, the artwork merges character design with psychological confession. This bear is not a mascot or a toy—it is a vessel for emotional trauma, painted with urgency, humor, and existential dread. The piece exists as a stark and poignant work within the world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where imagery speaks louder than exposition. Visual Language of Inner Collapse The bear figure is a recurring character in Jermaine Rogers’s visual universe, often used to explore themes of innocence broken and identity under pressure. In Damaged Bear 72, the character’s sagging posture and panicked eyes suggest disorientation and surrender. Red ink blots mark its body like open wounds, and its blank, swirling irises indicate an emotional unraveling. The text above the figure reads like a journal entry or whispered confession, turning the drawing into a narrative fragment that blends visual and literary anxiety. Rogers uses minimal color—mostly black, pink, red, and cyan—but every mark contributes to the sense of urgency and internal fragmentation. The simplicity of materials contrasts the complexity of message, a method that aligns with the unfiltered nature of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Marker Drawing as Emotional Broadcast Executed entirely in marker on fine art wove paper, the drawing reflects immediacy and tactile presence. The lines are loose, intentional, and flawed in a way that enhances their sincerity. Rogers’s use of bleeding ink and uneven pressure brings a sense of performance to the act of drawing, capturing not just form but emotional atmosphere. The paper holds every smudge and hesitation, turning what could be a sketch into a finished emotional document. The bear’s open expression, numbered forehead, and decaying appearance resonate as symbols of individuality lost in systemic tension. In the context of graffiti and pop character traditions, Rogers’s bear stands apart by leaning into fragility instead of bravado. Jermaine Rogers and the Anatomy of Emotional Resistance Damaged Bear 72 represents Jermaine Rogers at his most exposed, offering a piece that is both a visual statement and a confessional artifact. His work operates where emotion meets iconography, turning cartoonish figures into messengers of truth and despair. In the world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece is not about street dominance or design flash—it is about the quiet, painful moments that define human experience. Rogers’s ability to inject philosophical and emotional gravity into character-driven imagery places him among the most nuanced voices in the genre. This bear does not roar—it pleads, stares, and disintegrates in front of the viewer, offering no solutions, only honesty. That honesty is what transforms Damaged Bear 72 from a sketch into a relic of modern anxiety, drawn in lines that refuse to lie.

    $750.00 $450.00

Jermaine Rogers> Pop Artist Graffiti Street Artworks

Jermaine Rogers – Iconoclasm, Emotion, and the Vinyl Sublime in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

Jermaine Rogers is an American visual artist whose work spans concert poster design, fine art prints, designer vinyl figures, and large-scale street interventions. Known for his emotionally charged characters and politically subversive themes, Rogers emerged from the 1990s rock poster scene and quickly became one of the most recognizable names within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. His aesthetic draws on underground comics, psychedelic illustration, and counterculture iconography, but with a deeply personal twist—each figure he creates carries its own psychological weight. From wide-eyed rabbits to monstrous children and existential bears, his characters are not mascots but allegories, navigating themes of fear, rebellion, conformity, and survival in a chaotic world.

Characters as Symbolic Narrators of Modern Dread

At the core of Jermaine Rogers’ work is a cast of symbolic creatures, most notably the Dero and the Veil Specimen, each embodying elements of innocence corrupted by environment. The figures are often caught mid-thought, wide-eyed in anxiety or defiance, sometimes cloaked in rebellion, sometimes paralyzed by awareness. His characters appear on prints, murals, and collectible vinyl figures, with narratives that expand through visual storytelling rather than direct explanation. These beings speak through posture and atmosphere, existing in surreal landscapes or against stark negative space. This approach places Rogers firmly within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where the figure becomes a vessel for broader themes—power, control, loss, and the longing for meaning in a system built on illusion.

Poster Art, Vinyl Collectibles, and Limited Edition Culture

Rogers gained early recognition through hand-pulled screenprinted concert posters for bands like Tool, Radiohead, Nine Inch Nails, and The Mars Volta. These posters weren’t just advertisements—they were collectable art pieces laced with cryptic symbolism and visual metaphors. This subversion of promotional media laid the foundation for his expansion into fine art prints and designer toys. The transition into three-dimensional forms further amplified his impact. Vinyl figures like the Dero and Choices Bunny became objects of cultural commentary and personal expression. Each piece is produced in limited runs, often hand-signed and released through drops that attract both collectors and street art fans. This blend of exclusivity, narrative, and underground accessibility defines the space Jermaine Rogers occupies in the larger ecosystem of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork.

Jermaine Rogers and the Philosophy of Visual Rebellion

Jermaine Rogers’ art operates with the immediacy of street culture but is deeply philosophical in its intentions. His pieces explore the tension between instinct and manipulation, between personal truth and societal expectation. He challenges the viewer to confront their own complicity and their own fear. Whether it's through bold color schemes, delicate linework, or the blank stare of a sculpted figure, Rogers creates environments that are as emotionally disarming as they are visually bold. His work rejects simple classification—it exists between gallery walls and alley murals, between toy culture and protest art. In the language of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Jermaine Rogers speaks fluently and without apology, building a world where the symbols are strange, the colors are loud, and the message cuts through with unfiltered urgency.

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