Playboy

1 artwork

  • Rubik Shot Red Marilyn Rubikcubism Metal Giclee Print by Invader

    Invader Rubik Shot Red Marilyn Rubikcubism Metal Giclee Print by Invader

    Rubik Shot Red Marilyn Rubikcubism Metal Giclee Print by Invader Artwork Limited Edition Print on Diasec-Mounted Aluminium Composite Panel Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2023 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 774 Artwork Size 39.37x39.37 or 100cmx100cm NVDR1-4. Elevate your art collection with the captivating "Rubik Shot Red Marilyn Rubikcubism Metal Giclee Prints" by the celebrated street artist Invader. These four expertly crafted, ready-to-hang prints feature a vibrant reimagining of an iconic subject using the novel medium of Rubik’s Cubes. Each print in this distinguished series is meticulously produced, showcasing a Diasec-mounted giclée on a robust, laser-cut aluminum composite panel. They are designed to make a statement in any space with dimensions of 100 x 100 cm and a significant weight of 13.5kg. The "Rubik Shot Red Marilyn" collection perfectly blends nostalgia and contemporary art, reflecting Invader’s renowned creativity and innovation within the world of street pop art.

    $12,352.00

Playboy Graffiti Street Pop Artwork

Playboy in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

The Playboy icon has long transcended its origins as a men's lifestyle magazine to become a potent visual motif embedded in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Since its debut in 1953, the rabbit-head logo designed by Art Paul has represented a shifting spectrum of ideas, from rebellion and sexual liberation to critiques of consumer culture and celebrity commodification. Artists working in urban mediums and pop-influenced forms have frequently adopted and recontextualized the Playboy aesthetic, transforming it from a brand symbol into a flexible emblem of commentary.

The Playboy Symbol as Cultural Artifact

In the world of pop culture, Playboy operates on multiple levels. It is both aspirational and controversial, embodying ideals of luxury while also drawing sharp criticism for its portrayal of gender. This tension makes it a compelling subject for Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, which often thrives on paradox. When incorporated into murals, stencils, silkscreens, or wheat-paste posters, the rabbit head functions less as a product label and more as a mirror reflecting societal obsession with fame, sexuality, and visual identity. In the hands of artists like Andy Warhol, Richard Prince, and contemporary street-level practitioners, the Playboy logo becomes a canvas on which the values of glamour and objectification are dissected with irony or intensity.

Street Artists and the Repurposing of Playboy Imagery

Street artists frequently use familiar cultural icons to connect quickly with passersby while injecting subversive or critical messages. Playboy’s iconography, often shown alongside dollar signs, luxury logos, or weaponry, becomes a tool to confront issues such as body commodification, the commercialization of femininity, or the illusion of personal freedom within capitalism. Artists such as Risk, Buff Monster, and Faile have all engaged with Playboy iconography at some point in their careers, using hand-cut stencils, collage, or silkscreen overlays to integrate the motif into their visual language. Whether spray-painted onto alley walls or printed on fine art paper, the Playboy image in these contexts loses its original function as a marketing tool and instead acts as a layered statement on image culture itself.

Visual Language, Nostalgia, and Commentary

In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, nostalgia plays a powerful role, and Playboy’s retro appeal—particularly its 60s and 70s aesthetic—is often invoked to contrast the innocence of past pop imagery with today’s hyper-mediated visual environment. The blend of clean design, seductive themes, and cultural saturation allows artists to distort or reimagine the rabbit logo in contexts that both honor and critique its legacy. Whether portrayed in neon tones or deconstructed into chaotic urban abstractions, the Playboy icon remains one of the most recognizable and contested symbols in global pop culture. As a result, it continues to thrive as subject matter in contemporary street and graffiti scenes, where its meaning is fluid, confrontational, and always up for reinterpretation.

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