Original Artwork

3 artworks

  • Sale -15% Woody Original Marker Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone

    Ronnie Cutrone Woody Original Marker Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone

    Woody Original Magic Marker Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone on Card Stock Paper Modern Street Pop Artwork. 1988 Signed Dated Original Magic Marker Drawing Size 5x7 Woody Woodpecker Original Hand Drawing by Ronnie Cutrone. Comes With COA. Ronnie Cutrone, a prominent figure in the contemporary art movement, notably gifted the world with his renditions of popular culture icons. Among these masterpieces is his 1988 original magic marker drawing of Woody Woodpecker, a character synonymous with animated brilliance. Crafted meticulously on card stock paper, this piece vividly captures the essence of Woody with the distinctive style that Cutrone was celebrated for. What makes this drawing exceptionally unique is its origin in the heart of the modern street and pop art scene, where Cutrone's reputation was firmly rooted. Woody Woodpecker, with his iconic laughter and mischievous antics, becomes a perfect muse for Cutrone's exploration into the intersection of popular culture and street art. Measuring at an intimate size of 5x7, every stroke and shade of the marker reflects Cutrone's dedication to detailing and his mastery of expressing dynamism through minimalism. The bold contrasts, the playful aura, and the unmissable signature of Cutrone, dated '88, mark this piece as a testament to the era's artistic evolution. For collectors and art enthusiasts, the inclusion of a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) further elevates the drawing's significance, ensuring its authenticity and value. It's a stark reminder of when pop culture permeated street walls, galleries, and the hearts of many, through the hands of artists like Ronnie Cutrone. This piece, both in its subject and execution, stands as an embodiment of an era where animated characters were not just for entertainment but also a powerful medium of artistic expression.

    $1,089.00 $926.00

  • Sale -15% Paint Mug With Brushes Original Ceramic Sculpture by Joshua Vides

    Joshua Vides Paint Mug With Brushes Original Ceramic Sculpture by Joshua Vides

    Paint Mug With 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 4x7 Matte Black & White Mug With Magic Marker Pencil & Pen Statue. Paint Mug With Brushes by Joshua Vides: Sculptural Illusion in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Paint Mug With Brushes is a 2023 original hand-painted ceramic sculpture by graffiti artist and visual innovator Joshua Vides. Created as part of his Shattered Dreams series, this one-of-a-kind artwork measures 4 x 7 inches and is composed of ceramic and acrylic paint. The piece depicts a white coffee mug rendered in Vides’ signature graphic black-and-white cartoon style, filled with hyper-stylized tools of creation: a yellow pencil, a magic marker, and a black pen. The sculpture captures a studio scene in physical form, using handcrafted materials to simulate objects that are typically disposable, immediate, and overlooked. What makes this piece stand out is not only its visual precision but its conceptual subversion—turning something utilitarian into a sculptural emblem of artistic practice and cultural parody within the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The mug is marked by a bold comic-style halftone pattern and a speech bubble reading MATTE BLACK, stylized in block lettering that references print-era pop art and advertising aesthetics. The black drips along the rim of the mug are meticulously painted to resemble real ink overflow, but they are frozen in glaze. Each tool within the mug is permanently affixed, not removable, turning everyday drawing instruments into elements of a crafted illusion. The surfaces are covered with splatters and wear marks, evoking the raw energy of a working studio while being entirely sculpted and sealed in ceramic. Vides plays with texture, contrast, and cultural association, creating a sculpture that is both playful and disruptive. Material Transformation and Static Gesture Joshua Vides is best known for transforming real-world objects and environments into bold black-and-white renderings that mimic sketches or early animation cels. Paint Mug With Brushes continues this practice, but in a compact and highly intimate scale. The mug and its contents simulate the artifacts of creative labor, yet they are recontextualized as permanent objects. This transformation from ephemeral to collectible underscores the tension between process and presentation, central themes in Vides’ sculptural work. The halftone pattern and comic elements nod to pop art traditions while being reinterpreted through a graffiti-informed lens. The tools inside the mug are exaggerated in size and form, creating a slight distortion that brings humor and stylization to the piece. While each item appears familiar, the collective presentation turns them into a visual statement about repetition, effort, and value in the creative process. Joshua Vides and the Language of Urban Object Culture Vides has become a leading figure in the dialogue between fine art, fashion, and graffiti culture, known for his crisp aesthetic and thematic consistency. His Shattered Dreams series extends his exploration of artistic labor and commercial identity, embedding critique within deceptively simple forms. Paint Mug With Brushes brings this inquiry to a domestic and personal scale. The ceramic surface, usually associated with functional craft, is retooled here as a sculptural medium for visual metaphor. This sculpture is not about function—it is about meaning, about what it means to create and the tools we use to do it. The speech bubble containing the phrase MATTE BLACK also functions as a cultural code—referring to both the literal aesthetic of the sculpture and the contemporary obsession with branding and limited-edition polish. In Vides’ hands, the cup is not just a vessel but a commentary on taste, trend, and artistic voice. It reflects a blend of comic book irony, street practice, and pop conceptualism that defines Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork at its sharpest. Paint Mug With Brushes as Icon of Process and Personal Symbol This sculpture is more than an object—it is a symbol of the artist's internal and external world, where tools become trophies and marks of use become style elements. Paint Mug With Brushes is a visual celebration of imperfection, process, and persistence. It captures a quiet, familiar scene—the artist’s cup of pens—and renders it permanent, elevated, and infused with satire. Joshua Vides transforms the mundane into iconography, pulling from the same instinct that fuels street art: mark your tools, leave a trace, tell a story in bold lines. Within the broader world of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Paint Mug With Brushes operates as a miniature altar to creativity itself. It is clean yet messy, playful yet loaded, sculpted yet sketched. In freezing the moment when art begins—the reach for the pen, the dip of the brush—Vides delivers a static performance of creative energy. It is both studio relic and cultural artifact, and its message is simple but powerful: even the smallest tools can carry the loudest voice.

    $1,782.00 $1,515.00

  • King Bird Clock Original Acrylic Reclaimed Painting by Zdenek Janda

    Zdenek Janda King Bird Clock Original Acrylic Reclaimed Painting by Zdenek Janda

    King Bird Clock Original One of a Kind Acrylic Paint Painting Artwork on Reclaimed Clock Face by Modern Pop Artist Zdenek Janda. 2012 Not Signed Original Painting on Reclaimed Cloack Dial 4x4 King Bird Clock Original Acrylic Reclaimed Painting by Zdenek Janda

    $134.00

Original Artwork

Original Artwork as a Core Medium in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

Original artwork remains the most direct and impactful form of creative expression within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. These works, executed by hand in a single iteration, serve as the foundation of an artist’s visual identity. Whether composed on canvas, wood, street signs, found objects, or walls, original pieces are where experimentation, emotion, and intent are fully visible. Artists working in this space often blend graffiti-based techniques with graphic aesthetics, using materials like aerosol, ink, acrylic, and marker to develop layered compositions. Each original artwork stands apart from multiples or editions because it is singular—a one-off that embodies the gesture and immediacy of the artist’s hand. In a culture shaped by tagging, repetition, and stylized language, the original work holds particular weight, not only as an object of authenticity but as a form of raw communication.

Technique, Surface, and Raw Process

The process of creating original artwork within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork is often defined by speed, layering, and material responsiveness. Many artists trained in graffiti culture carry with them a commitment to direct mark-making and improvisation. Surfaces are selected not only for their texture or durability but for their connection to the urban environment. Metal panels, salvaged signage, shipping crates, and concrete slabs are all commonly repurposed as canvases. Paint application varies from clean, graphic block-outs to expressive drips, fades, and sprays. In many cases, the energy of the piece lies in its imperfections—overspray, buffed areas, or abrupt transitions are not hidden, they are celebrated as part of the visual language. The use of stencil, sticker layering, and raw brushwork reflects the ongoing influence of the street, where control and chaos are in constant negotiation.

Artist Voice and Cultural Positioning

Original artwork allows for full expression of the artist’s intent without the boundaries of format, size, or duplication. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, artists like OG Slick, Shepard Fairey, Retna, and Futura have all built careers around the strength of their original pieces. These works often carry deeper commentary than their commercial counterparts, diving into themes such as consumerism, rebellion, identity, and coded language. The ability to paint freely, to make permanent decisions without concern for replication, creates a space where risk and vision intersect. Many artists return to original works as a way to evolve or reset their approach. It is within the one-of-one painting or sculpture that new techniques are often born—then carried forward into print runs, murals, or product design.

Collectors and Institutional Value of One-of-One Works

Original artwork within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork has gained significant attention in both private and institutional collections. As the line between contemporary and urban art continues to dissolve, these unique pieces are now featured in museum collections, major exhibitions, and fine art auctions. The scarcity of originals elevates their value, not just in market terms but in cultural significance. Each piece represents an unfiltered snapshot of the artist’s mindset at a specific moment. While prints and editions extend reach and accessibility, originals are held as archives of the creative process, where surface, intent, and execution converge. In a visual culture often saturated by digital imagery and mass production, the original artwork asserts itself as irreplaceable—standing as a document, a statement, and a physical presence that reflects the urgency and influence of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork.
Footer image

© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

    • Amazon
    • American Express
    • Apple Pay
    • Bancontact
    • Diners Club
    • Discover
    • Google Pay
    • iDEAL
    • Mastercard
    • PayPal
    • Shop Pay
    • Visa

    Login

    Forgot your password?

    Don't have an account yet?
    Create account