Ron English- POPaganda

7 artworks

  • Honey Butts Art Toy by Ron English

    Ron English- POPaganda Honey Butts Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Honey Butts the Obese Bee Limited Edition Cereal Killer Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by pop modern artist Ron English- POPaganda. The latest addition to Ron English- POPaganda’s Cereal Killer series is Honey Butt the Obese Bee! Standing 8” tall and wielding his dipper, Honey Butt is a buzz to the gut!

    $251.00

  • Temper Tot Mad Lad Pose Art Toy by Ron English

    Ron English- POPaganda Temper Tot Mad Lad Pose Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Temper Tot- Mad Lad Pose Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by pop modern artist Ron English- POPaganda. Ron English- POPaganda Temper Tot 10” figure: Mad Lad Pose. Everyone’s favorite Angry Baby is back, bigger and madder than ever! The open edition colorway features the classic green body and blue pants. English coined the term POPaganda to describe his signature mash-up of high and low cultural touchstones, from superhero mythology to totems of art history, populated with his vast and constantly growing arsenal of original characters.

    $264.00

  • MC Supersized Wood 2021 Designer Con Art Toy by Ron English

    Ron English- POPaganda MC Supersized Wood 2021 Designer Con Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    MC Supersized- Wood 2021 Designer Con Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti Ron Ron English- POPaganda X SFBI MC Super Sized Wood Version This was a convention exclusive at this years Designer Con. If you were not able to attend this is your chance to try and pick this variant up and put into your collection. Stands 8" Tall

    $529.00

  • MC Supersized Gold Glitter Skull Logo Art Toy by Ron English

    Ron English- POPaganda MC Supersized Gold Glitter Skull Logo Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    MC Supersized Gold Glitter Skull- Logo Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by street graffiti Ron Ron English- POPaganda x Toy Tokyo x Secret Base. 2021 MC Supersized Gold Glitter Skull by Toy Tokyo x Secret Base - W Logo. Made in Japan Sofubifeaturing a sparkly gold glitter design with a translucent face and inner gold glitter skull. There are two variants of the edition, regular and one with the ‘W’ logo of Secretbase’s new Osaka store on the lower pocket. Brand New in Unopened Packaging

    $474.00

  • Big Gang- Big Poppa Art Toy by Ron English x Cereso Monky

    Ron English- POPaganda Big Gang- Big Poppa Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda x Cereso Monky

    Big Gang- Big Poppa Hand Painted Original Unique Cereso Monky Artwork on Ron English- POPaganda Can't You See Vinyl Art Toy. 2021 Signed by Cereso Monky One of a Kind Original Ron English- POPaganda Biggie Sculpture Artwork Size 5x8.5 Custom Painted Figure by Cereso Monky. 1 of 1. Mixed Media, Acrylic, Spray Paint

    $1,013.00

  • Signal Lost, It's all Good Big Poppa Art Toy by Ron English x Dead St

    Ron English- POPaganda Signal Lost, It's all Good Big Poppa Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda x Dead St

    Signal Lost, It's all Good- Big Poppa Hand Painted Original Unique Dead St Artwork on Ron English- POPaganda Can't You See Vinyl Art Toy. Custom Painted Figure by Dead St. 1 of 1. Mixed Media, Acrylic, Spray Paint

    $835.00

  • Iron Skin Grin Battle Damage Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Ron English- POPaganda Iron Skin Grin Battle Damage Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda

    Iron Skin Grin- Battle Damage Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by Artists Ron English- POPaganda x Made By Monsters 2021 Stamped/Printed Limited Edition of 500- Grin Smiley Boba Fett Star Wars with Battle Damage Colorway Pop Art Series. Displayed With Bag Ron English – Iron Skin Grin Battle Damage in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Iron Skin Grin – Battle Damage is a limited edition vinyl art toy created in 2021 by Ron English in collaboration with Made by Monsters, released as part of his larger POPaganda universe. Limited to just 500 pieces, this collectible features a stylized, battle-worn version of Boba Fett, reimagined through English’s iconic Grin series. With detailed helmet dents, bold color blocking, and the unmistakable skeletal grin visible beneath the visor, this piece fuses fan culture with subversive street aesthetics. It’s not just a figure—it’s a commentary on icon worship, war culture, and the plastic mythology of modern America, all through the lens of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. This figure belongs to Ron English’s long-running exploration of pop culture distortion. The Grin motif—a skeletal smile embedded within famous characters—is used here to deconstruct the legendary Star Wars bounty hunter. English does not merely replicate Boba Fett, he fractures him. By inserting the skull-teeth grin and painting damage onto the armor, English forces a conversation about what lies beneath the mythology of heroism and violence. It turns a beloved sci-fi figure into an eerie effigy of consumer nostalgia—and critique. Star Wars Meets Graffiti Mutant Aesthetic Street Pop Art thrives on remix culture, and Ron English’s Iron Skin Grin figure exemplifies this approach. It pulls from one of the most commercially successful narratives in American media—Star Wars—and injects it with graffiti-born irreverence and symbolic decay. The character design retains its pop appeal: clean vinyl, bold lines, slick finishes. But the injection of the Grin skull beneath the mask mutates Boba Fett into something uncanny, almost undead. The figure's sculpted dents and wear patterns mimic real combat damage, which juxtapose perfectly against the cartoonish structure and toy-grade polish. This creates tension between authenticity and illusion—between the glorified violence of media icons and the real consequences of power and identity. That’s where the graffiti logic kicks in: take what’s familiar, mark it, break it, and remake it with your own truth. Vinyl Collectibles as Subversive Street Sculpture Ron English’s vinyl toys, including Iron Skin Grin, are direct descendants of street art’s rebellious spirit. These figures are made for shelves, but they speak with the voice of murals, stencils, and tags. Each figure is essentially a 3D print of a philosophy—accessible in form, but densely layered with cultural critique. Much like a throw-up on a corporate billboard or a wheatpasted poster of a politician’s distorted face, these vinyl sculptures take dominant narratives and twist them into satire. This collectible is also part of a growing tradition where designer toys become artifacts of graffiti culture’s evolution—portable street sculptures for a post-graffiti world. Ron English, alongside artists like Sket-One and KAWS (Brian Donnelly), helped shape this fusion between character design, political parody, and collectible art, showing that street-level energy can thrive within manufactured form factors. POPaganda and the Weaponized Smile The Iron Skin Grin – Battle Damage figure is deeply embedded in Ron English’s POPaganda series—his personal art universe where capitalism, consumerism, and pop mythology are both celebrated and deconstructed. The Grin characters are central to this universe, each one a cracked mask that reveals the hollow laughter beneath American pop culture. By giving Boba Fett the Grin, English rewires the character’s mystique into something more sinister: a consumer product shaped by violence, nostalgia, and the endless hunger of fandom. This makes Iron Skin Grin more than a toy. It’s a miniature revolution—a physical embodiment of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork’s mission to expose the glossy surfaces of culture and show what’s really grinning underneath. Through this vinyl figure, Ron English again proves that subversion can wear armor, carry a blaster, and still smirk at the system that made it legendary.

    $450.00

Ron English- POPaganda> Pop Artist Graffiti Street Artworks

Ron English – POPaganda in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork

Ron English is one of the most important and subversive voices in contemporary Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, and his self-coined term POPaganda defines an entire movement built on the collision between mass culture and political critique. Born in the United States in 1959, English began his career as an underground billboard liberator—hijacking corporate advertising spaces and replacing them with hand-painted, hyper-saturated visual counterstatements. Through his work, he has turned familiar icons—such as Ronald McDonald, Mickey Mouse, and Abraham Lincoln—into mutated, surreal, and often unsettling images that challenge the viewer’s relationship to media, authority, and consumption. POPaganda is not just a clever pun. It is English’s direct response to the influence of consumerism and mass messaging on culture. It merges the visual vocabulary of American advertising with the iconoclasm of graffiti and the intensity of pop surrealism. His works often feature twisted versions of brand mascots or public figures, rendered in slick, comic-like detail that masks deeper messages about health, capitalism, politics, and identity. This is Street Pop Art at its most loaded—art that is loud, funny, grotesque, and unafraid to confront uncomfortable truths.

Billboard Liberation and Street-Level Disruption

English gained notoriety in the 1980s and 1990s through his billboard interventions, particularly across Texas and New York City. These pieces—often hand-painted with professional-grade precision—would be installed overnight on existing commercial signage, blending seamlessly at a glance but shocking the viewer upon closer inspection. A smiling fast-food mascot with skull teeth, a Disney character with bloated limbs, or a corporate logo dripping with sarcasm—these interventions were not just vandalism, but philosophical statements against the omnipresence of brand control and media saturation. This method mirrors the ethos of graffiti culture: reclaiming public space and turning passive visual environments into battlegrounds of meaning. English’s billboard takeovers combined the spontaneity of street bombing with the layered critique of conceptual art, bridging the raw energy of graffiti with the tactical sharpness of street pop commentary.

POPaganda Characters and Reconstructed Icons

Central to Ron English’s visual universe are his recurring figures—like MC Supersized (an obese Ronald McDonald), the Grin series (featuring skull-grinning versions of pop icons), and his reinterpretations of political and religious figures. These characters are not simply caricatures; they are symbolic vehicles. They hold up a mirror to modern America’s obsession with branding, distortion, and visual consumption. In his Abraham Obama sculpture, for example, English merged two presidents into one surreal hybrid—highlighting the media mythmaking around American leadership and the blur between reverence and commodification. These figures appear across murals, canvases, vinyl toys, designer sculpture, and limited-edition prints—each format allowing English to reach different audiences. This multi-platform presence mimics the very system he critiques, embedding his message into the same cultural flow that shapes mass identity.

Fine Art Meets the Streets in the POPaganda Machine

Despite working in gallery settings and producing museum-level work, English has maintained his connection to the tactics and principles of street art. His murals appear on city walls from Los Angeles to Tokyo, often alongside graffiti legends and contemporary pop surrealists. He collaborates across formats—from vinyl sculpture to apparel—demonstrating how street pop art can infiltrate mainstream culture while retaining its critical edge. Ron English’s POPaganda is more than a visual style—it is a philosophy of resistance through familiarity. By hijacking the images people trust most—mascots, heroes, presidents—he disrupts comfort and forces reflection. In doing so, he embodies the essence of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork: bold, confrontational, visually addictive, and grounded in the urgency to wake people up. In the canon of modern art, Ron English stands as both a trickster and a truth-teller, using the tools of pop to expose the lies within it. Through POPaganda, he turns the language of commerce into a vocabulary of dissent—and that transformation is at the heart of what makes street pop art so vital.

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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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