Smiley Face
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Ron English- POPaganda Mona Lisa Grin Archival Print by Ron English- POPaganda
Mona Lisa Grin- Welcome Wall Archival Pigment Print on Metal with Etched Acrylic Base Sculpture Artwork by graffiti street artist modern pop legend artist Ron English- POPaganda. Ron English- POPaganda is widely considered a seminal figure in the advancement of street art away from traditional wild-style lettering into clever statement and masterful trompe l’oeil based art. He has created illegal murals and billboards that blend stunning visuals with biting political, consumerist and surrealist statements, hijacking public space worldwide for the sake of art since the 1980s.
$371.00
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Atomik Hello There Orange Original Spray Paint Art Can by Atomik
Hello There Orange Original Spray Paint Art Can by Atomik Sculpture Drawing Artwork by Iconic Pop Culture Modern Artist. 2025 Signed Original Magic Marker Atomik Orange Smiling Face Reclaimed Spray Paint Can Painting Artwork Size 3x8 Hello There, Orange Original Spray Paint Art Can by Atomik The Hello There Orange Original Spray Paint Art Can by Atomik is a distinct piece of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork that exemplifies the artist’s commitment to transforming ordinary objects into personalized statements of identity and expression. Created in 2025 and signed by the artist, this artwork is drawn directly on a reclaimed spray paint can using a magic marker. The work features the iconic grinning orange face that has become synonymous with Atomik’s visual language. With bold black linework over a used Montana spray can, the piece merges the raw energy of graffiti materials with the intimate immediacy of a hand-drawn illustration. Atomik’s instantly recognizable orange face peeks forward with oversized, cartoonish eyes and a mischievous smile, encapsulating the spirit of his Miami-based street art heritage. Reclaiming the Tools of Expression as Art Objects Spray paint cans are a staple in graffiti and street art culture. They are tools of resistance, freedom, and self-expression. Atomik’s decision to turn a spray can into the canvas itself reflects a deeper ethos in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Rather than discarding the medium once emptied, he reclaims it—transforming the functional into the collectible. The resulting artwork stands as both an homage to graffiti’s tactile process and a rebellion against traditional notions of fine art. Every dent, scratch, and warning label on the can becomes part of the finished aesthetic, grounding the orange character in the lived reality of street-level artmaking. This practice not only preserves a piece of graffiti history but recasts it as a standalone object worthy of admiration and discourse. The Smiling Orange and the Miami Identity The smiling orange has its roots in Atomik’s personal response to the demolition of Miami’s beloved Orange Bowl stadium, a landmark of civic pride. Atomik reimagined the orange as a graffiti character that pays tribute while asserting a uniquely Floridian flavor. Over the years, it has appeared on freight trains, abandoned buildings, and murals, becoming one of the most widely recognized characters in contemporary graffiti. On this specific spray paint can, the orange floats in contrast against a sea of fine print, warnings, and hazard symbols. This juxtaposition of regulatory text and unruly character speaks to the tension between control and freedom, legality and expression. It also reflects the artist’s ongoing commentary on reclaiming space and materials for cultural storytelling. Graffiti as Sculpture and Collectible Commentary This hand-drawn reclaimed can is not only a visual piece but a sculptural one. The cylindrical form allows the artwork to live in three dimensions, giving viewers the opportunity to see how street art evolves when it enters a more permanent and collectible format. Unlike traditional canvas or digital prints, the use of the spray can physically and conceptually connects the viewer to the graffiti process. Atomik’s signature on the base further authenticates the piece, anchoring it in his artistic lineage and practice. As Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork continues to push boundaries, works like the Hello There Orange Spray Can stand at the forefront, showing that even a once-discarded object can become a celebrated artifact when touched by the right artist’s hand.
$225.00
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Atomik Hungry Eyes Original Pen Pencil Paint Drawing by Atomik
Hungry Eyes Original Pen Pencil Paint Drawing by Atomik Modern Street Pop Artwork. 2025 Signed Original Ink Paint Pencil Graphite on Paper Drawing Size 5x8 of the Famous Miami Florida Atomik Orange. Hungry Eyes Original Drawing by Atomik: A Raw Expression of Graffiti Culture in Street Pop Art The 2025 piece titled Hungry Eyes by Miami-based graffiti artist Atomik is a potent example of raw Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork captured in traditional media. Known globally for his animated orange character, Atomik channels his origins from the streets of Florida into this expressive 5x8 inch work executed in pen, pencil, ink, and white paint on paper. The drawing preserves the energetic curves, exaggerated facial features, and strong iconography that define his visual language, yet it diverges by focusing on depth, texture, and mood rather than public wall space or train cars. This signed original holds particular weight because it brings Atomik’s explosive style into a more intimate and tactile dimension, highlighting the same mischievous gaze and stylized emotion that viewers typically encounter on a city wall or boxcar. The Miami Influence and the Evolution of Atomik’s Orange Atomik, born and based in Miami, Florida, has been a key figure in the visual evolution of graffiti across the southeastern United States. His signature orange character was born out of a tribute to a lost local landmark—the Miami Orange Bowl—and has since morphed into a universal symbol of urban rebellion, humor, and resilience. Hungry Eyes strips down that icon into its most fundamental parts. Drawn with ballpoint pen, graphite, and accented with sharp white strokes, this piece introduces nuance and technique often overlooked in outdoor works. Swirls and crosshatch marks surround and define the facial contours, merging classical drawing skills with street sensibility. The background of kraft-tone paper gives the composition a raw, unpolished energy, consistent with the artist’s handstyle and sense of immediacy. Even in this format, the image demands attention as if it were wheatpasted across a city block. Street Pop Art Translated to Fine Drawing While Atomik’s graffiti legacy is built upon bright enamel hues and fatcap spray lines across highly visible surfaces, Hungry Eyes functions as an alternate lens into the graffiti psyche—quiet, detailed, and full of coded visual emotion. The angular ink strokes channel years of tagging and can control, while the whimsical circular gradients embedded in the eyes mimic bubble letters and aerosol flares. The use of hand-drawn highlights instead of reflective gloss draws from a comic-book aesthetic while simultaneously staying grounded in graffiti's DIY tradition. This drawing proves that Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork can exist with just as much presence and weight on paper as it does on steel or concrete. Signature and Collectibility in Contemporary Street Art The reverse of the artwork is inscribed in pencil with the artist’s signature, a stylized flourish of the name Atomik and the date 25. This mark authenticates the piece not only in terms of authorship but also as a deliberate object within the continuum of street artist editions and originals. Collectors and fans of graffiti culture recognize works like Hungry Eyes as evidence that street artists are not limited to spray paint and murals. Atomik’s ability to transfer his identity onto fine art media makes this piece a collector-worthy addition for any serious archive of modern graffiti or pop-inspired street visuals. The drawing stands as a reminder that graffiti is not only about location or defiance—it is about mark-making, identity, and the ability to repurpose commercial and personal symbols into resonant visual statements.
$300.00
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Ron English- POPaganda Mad Happy Monk Grin Orange Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda
Mad Happy Monk Grin- Orange Limited Edition Blacklight Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by Street Graffiti Artist Ron English- POPaganda. 2019 Signed Limited Edition New In Box. Blacklight orange colorway of the Mad Happy Monk is 8 inches tall. Hand-signed by Ron
$225.00
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Ron English- POPaganda Donald T Rich Grin Gold Art Toy by Ron English- POPaganda
Donald T Rich Grin- Gold Limited Edition Vinyl Art Toy Collectible Artwork by Artist Ron English- POPaganda Modern Pop Artwork. 2017 New In Box Limited Edition Artwork Size 12" Tall
$283.00
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Madsaki Madsaki Mona Lisa 3 Dharma Green Spray Paint Can Artwork by Montana MTN
Madsaki- Mona Lisa 3 Dharma Green Limited Edition Rare Spray Paint Can Artwork Crossover by famous graffiti paint maker Montana MTN. Mona Lisa 3 Spray Paint Can, 2021 MNT Colors Spray Paint, Low Pressure Can in Wood and Acrylic Case Spray Paint Color: Dharma Green 400ml. Limited Edition of 500 Madsaki Mona Lisa 3 Dharma Green Spray Can in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork The Mona Lisa 3 Dharma Green spray paint can by Japanese artist Madsaki is a limited edition collectible released in 2021 as part of the Montana Colors artist series. Created in collaboration with the iconic graffiti paint brand Montana MTN, this edition transforms a 400ml can into a crossover artwork that bridges classical painting with the raw aesthetic of street expression. The artwork features Madsaki’s reinterpretation of the Mona Lisa, executed in his signature irreverent style with smeared eyes and a dripping smile. Known for challenging traditional art values through parody and graffiti energy, Madsaki reimagines one of the most recognized portraits in history by layering over it with his visual language of distortion, repetition, and satire. This edition was capped at 500 units and includes a Dharma Green paint fill, housed in a custom wood display case, making it both a functioning paint tool and a contemporary sculptural object. Visual Style and Conceptual Fusion Madsaki’s reworking of the Mona Lisa is emblematic of his broader practice, where he recontextualizes canonical works from art history through a graffiti-informed lens. His version on the Dharma Green can depicts the Mona Lisa with vacant eyes and a haunting grin rendered with black paint that bleeds downward, invoking both humor and discomfort. The brushwork mimics crude spray lines and hand-drawn texture, celebrating imperfection and emotional intensity over traditional beauty. This graffiti-infused rendition replaces reverence with raw energy, transforming a Renaissance icon into a modern pop symbol. Montana Colors used high-resolution printing technology to wrap this expression around the cylindrical form, reinforcing the unity between the artist’s visual narrative and the object’s street-level functionality. Each can serves as a portable canvas, allowing collectors to hold in hand a version of Madsaki’s bold and challenging artistic statement. Artist Background and Cross-Medium Innovation Madsaki, born in Osaka, Japan and raised in the United States, is internationally known for his ability to navigate fine art, graffiti, and pop culture. His career includes collaborations with galleries across Asia, Europe, and North America. Though trained at Parsons School of Design in New York, his artistic voice is rooted more in subversion than formalism. He frequently paints figures from Western art and mass media, overlaying them with emotive distortions and graffiti aesthetics. Madsaki's pieces often blur the lines between parody and homage, combining critique with cultural celebration. The Mona Lisa 3 can exemplifies this hybrid voice, drawing from art history and injecting it with street culture’s unfiltered pulse. His involvement in the Montana MTN series marks a fusion of museum-grade vision with urban materials, expanding the boundaries of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Collectible Value and Presentation Each Mona Lisa 3 Dharma Green can arrives sealed with Montana’s factory-fill low pressure paint and is encased in a wooden and acrylic box stamped with the artist’s signature. This dual presentation reinforces the piece’s status as both an art object and a practical tool of graffiti. The display-ready nature of the packaging elevates the can beyond utility, while retaining the cultural edge of a spray can as a symbol of resistance, autonomy, and creation. As part of a limited series of 500, it has become a coveted object among collectors of street art, pop art, and contemporary crossovers. The work holds significance in the evolution of spray paint culture, encapsulating the idea that tools once considered part of a counterculture can be reclaimed as works of art in their own right. Madsaki’s Mona Lisa 3 spray can is a direct challenge to the hierarchy of fine art, using humor and raw form to restage history in a new urban light.
$175.00
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Mr André Saraiva Mr André Glossy Black Spray Paint Can Artwork by Montana MTN
Mr André- Black Limited Edition Rare Spray Paint Can Artwork Crossover by famous graffiti paint maker Montana MTN. 2021 Mr André Glossy Black Color Limited Edition of 500 Spray Paint Can with Custom Wood Box Object Artwork Size 3x8 Montana MTN Filled with Paint. Mr André Glossy Black Spray Paint Can by Montana MTN – Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork The Mr André Glossy Black Limited Edition Spray Paint Can, released in 2021 by Montana MTN, stands as an iconic artifact in the culture of street pop art and graffiti artwork. Produced in a highly collectible edition of just 500, this 3x8 inch can is filled with glossy black spray paint and presented in a custom wood box etched with the artist’s signature and the Montana Limited Edition insignia. The visual design of the can is unmistakably linked to André Saraiva’s infamous graffiti alter ego Mr A. The character’s simplified linework face, topped with exaggerated symbols like X and O, is a visual shorthand for decades of international street influence. As both a functional spray can and a standalone art object, this release occupies a hybrid territory that fuses utilitarian graffiti culture with high-concept collectible art. Mr André: Graffiti Artist and International Street Pop Icon André Saraiva, born in Uppsala, Sweden and raised in Paris, France, is a globally recognized street pop art figure whose graffiti roots stretch back to the early 1990s. He rose to prominence through his creation of Mr A, a character that would become emblematic of romantic rebellion and irreverent joy across global cityscapes. Seen on rooftops, alleyways, and walls from Paris to Tokyo to New York, Mr A’s wide grin and looped limbs established a visual brand that is as subversive as it is playful. Mr André has not limited himself to street walls. His visual language has transcended into collaborations with luxury fashion, hospitality, and design industries, without losing the grit and spontaneity of his graffiti foundations. Whether on canvas or subway walls, his work maintains its bold narrative identity, reinforcing the significance of visual storytelling in public spaces. Montana MTN’s Artist Series and Object Culture Montana Colors, based in Barcelona, has long been the gold standard in spray paint for graffiti artists worldwide. Their Artist Series elevates the humble spray can into a platform for artistic collaboration, giving space to pioneers like Mr André to reinterpret the object through their own visual lexicons. The 2021 Mr André Glossy Black edition reflects the artist’s clean line art and urban minimalism. The deep black backdrop and orange graphic elements lend the piece a totemic presence that speaks to both its street roots and gallery-level presentation. Montana’s use of high-quality materials, matched with limited edition packaging and artist-focused branding, transforms the can from tool to artifact. Street Pop Art Legacy Encapsulated in the Mr André MTN Can This limited edition piece is not only a celebration of Mr André’s global artistic reach but also a testament to the cultural significance of graffiti in the evolution of contemporary art. The fusion of street rawness with gallery-grade presentation encapsulates the progression of graffiti from subculture to respected creative movement. The Mr André Glossy Black spray can is a physical expression of this evolution—a collectible sculpture that symbolizes movement, rebellion, and stylistic clarity. For collectors and followers of street pop art and graffiti artwork, it represents both a tangible and symbolic connection to one of the most recognizable artists in the genre.
$175.00