Street Art

10 artworks

  • Sale -15% Turk Street AP01 Original Spray Paint Painting by Apexer

    Apexer Turk Street AP01 Original Spray Paint Painting by Apexer

    Turk Street AP 01 Original Painting Spray Paint Aerosol on Coventry Rag Fine Art Paper by Apexer Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. "When I paint on the street I like to have fun. I'm always trying new ideas out that turn into more ideas. In this painting, I wanted to have two drastically different fill-in styles. So the top half is a classic fill of mine and in the bottom half, I play with the idea of different color chrome effects. It was a fun piece to paint in the heart of San Francisco. This piece is all part of my artistic vocabulary. This particular one says apex and I was painting in the super burner style, but I was really trying to push the ideas of color and style." - Apexer

    $1,124.00 $955.00

  • BasquiART Archival Paper Standard Silkscreen Print by Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta

    Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta BasquiART Archival Paper Standard Silkscreen Print by Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta

    BasquiART- Archival Paper Standard 15-Color Hand-Pulled Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Deckled Archival Paper by Mr Brainwash- Thierry Guetta. 2021 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 61 Artwork Size 22x30 2021 Edition of 61 Signed & Numbered- 15-Color Screen Print on Archival Paper with Deckled Edges Size: 30 x 22 Singed and thumb printed by the Artist.

    $4,011.00

  • On a Heartbeat Original Street Sign Painting by Chris RWK

    Chris RWK- Robots Will Kill On a Heartbeat Original Street Sign Painting by Chris RWK

    On a Heartbeat Original Mixed Media Painting Graffiti Artist Modern Pop Art on Real Metal Street Sign by Chris RWK. 2022 Signed Original Mixed Media Acrylic & Spray Paint on Real 30x30 Street Stop Sign Immersed in various mediums, Chris began to store the images brought forward though these everyday experiences in what he refers to as a “mental journal”. This journal was a haven of his thoughts that he could refer back to whenever necessary.

    $3,645.00

  • Collateral Damage Circles Original Spray Paint Mixed Media Painting by Risk Rock

    Risk Rock Collateral Damage Circles Original Spray Paint Mixed Media Painting by Risk Rock

    Collateral Damage Circles Original Painting Mixed-Media Spray Paint, Sand. Glitter, Acrylic on Heavy Paper by Risk Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. Collateral Damage Circles, 2018 - Own a Risk original! Original (spray paint, acrylic on heavy paper, Glitter, Sand Coarse Gritty Texture Grabs The Light) Size: 22x30 Inches Date Made: 2018 Original work – Each unique, one of a kind, hand-signed.

    $2,442.00

  • Sale -15% Def Syntax Blue Yellow I HPM Silkscreen Print by Defer

    Defer Def Syntax Blue Yellow I HPM Silkscreen Print by Defer

    Def Syntax- Blue Yellow I Hand-Embellished Limited Edition Silkscreen Print on Fine Art Paper by Artist Defer Contemporary Pop Artwork. 2022 Signed & Numbered HPM Hand-Embellished Mixed Media Limited Edition of 1 Artwork Size 22x30 Embossed by BEYOND THE STREETS 1 of 1. "Def Syntax pays homage to the ancient roots of typography and timeless nature of hand styles". - DEFER "Def Syntax- Blue Yellow I" is a profound testament to the evolution and intricacies of typography, artfully conceived by the celebrated artist Defer. Revered in the realms of pop art, street art, and graffiti art, Defer masterfully intertwines historical reverence with contemporary aesthetics, bringing forth a piece that resonates with art enthusiasts and historians alike. In this hand-embellished limited edition silkscreen print on fine art paper, the symphony of blue and yellow hues melds seamlessly with the dynamic myriad of characters and symbols. Every stroke and nuance emanates Defer's deep respect for the ancient roots of typography. The immersive background, seemingly chaotic at first glance, is methodically juxtaposed against a bold, green depiction of a creature reminiscent of ancient mythologies. Such intentional interplay between the old and new, chaos and structure, serves as a testament to the artist's profound understanding of balance. Dated 2022, this piece stands as a unique embodiment of Defer's artistic journey, being a hand-embellished mixed media limited edition. As an affirmation of its authenticity and value, the artwork is meticulously embossed by BEYOND THE STREETS, a testament to its pedigree in the contemporary art space. Limited to just one edition, its exclusivity adds another layer of allure, making it a coveted piece for collectors. As quoted by the artist himself, "Def Syntax pays homage to the ancient roots of typography and timeless nature of hand styles." Such a statement encapsulates the essence of the artwork, bridging historical craftsmanship with modern interpretations. For anyone invested in the realms of pop, street, or graffiti art, "Def Syntax- Blue Yellow I" serves not just as an artwork, but as a chronicle of the enduring spirit of human expression.

    $1,174.00 $998.00

  • Collateral Damage Original Spray Paint Mixed Media Painting by Risk Rock

    Risk Rock Collateral Damage Original Spray Paint Mixed Media Painting by Risk Rock

    Collateral Damage Original Painting Mixed-Media Spray Paint, Acrylic on Heavy Paper by Risk Graffiti Street Artist Modern Pop Art. Collateral Damage, 2018 - Own a Risk original! Original (spray paint, acrylic on heavy paper) Size: 22x30 Inches Date Made: 2018 Original work – Each unique, one of a kind, hand-signed.

    $2,117.00

  • Where The Hose M30 Hand Embellished HPM Giclee Print by OG Slick

    OG Slick Where The Hose M30 Hand Embellished HPM Giclee Print by OG Slick

    Where The Hose M30 Hand Embellished HPM Giclee Print by OG Slick Artwork Limited Edition Print on Deckled 310gsm Fine Art Paper Hand Embellished Print Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2025 Signed & Numbered HPM Hand Embellished by OG Slick Giclee & Spray Paint Limited Edition of 25 Artwork Size 30x30 HPM Hand Embellished Giclee Print. Splatter pattern, strokes and paint color to hand embellish varies. EVERY HPM IS UNIQUE. YOU MAY NOT RECEIVE THE ONE IN THE PHOTO, CHOSEN AT RANDOM. Where The Hose M30 by OG Slick: Urban Commentary and Graffiti Wit in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Where The Hose M30 is a 2025 hand-embellished giclee print by OG Slick, presented in a limited edition of 25. Each 30x30 inch print is produced on 310gsm deckled fine art paper, signed and numbered by the artist, and uniquely hand-finished using spray paint and various graffiti techniques. The central subject is a fire hydrant—painted, stickered, and transformed—set against a stark background, with the hand-scrawled question Where the hose at? hovering above in playful red script. The image merges cheeky wordplay with street realism, combining slick visual execution and raw cultural irreverence. Every HPM version differs, each featuring its own variation of paint splatter, spray application, and embellishment marks, reinforcing the individuality and rebellious spontaneity embedded in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. Symbolism, Humor, and Street-Level Critique The fire hydrant in Where The Hose M30 is rendered with a gritty aesthetic, adorned in layers of graffiti, tags, and stickers including OG Slick’s signature Japanese text, cartoon gloves, and pop references. These decals give the hydrant the look of a public object long claimed by urban artists. The playful title scrawled above evokes both literal and slang meanings, inviting multiple interpretations—part street joke, part cultural commentary. Whether read as a nod to graffiti beefs, territorial markings, or masculine bravado, the question itself is as much a provocation as it is a punchline. Some variants in the edition feature bursting spray streams, others are overlaid with bold magenta or buffed whiteout gestures, each echoing the transient, ever-changing nature of city surfaces and graffiti culture. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, OG Slick uses this hydrant not only as a subject but as a symbol of pressure, release, and public infrastructure hijacked by personal voice. OG Slick’s Artistic Practice and Visual Language OG Slick, a fixture of Los Angeles graffiti culture since the 1980s, is renowned for remixing commercial and municipal iconography through a filter of street aesthetics and satirical wit. His work blends cartoon-based visual familiarity with hardcoded graffiti influence, often embedding commentary on fame, ownership, and identity. In Where The Hose M30, he recontextualizes the mundane—turning a utilitarian fire hydrant into a sculptural character that carries attitude, history, and street-coded meaning. By layering his personal motifs over a public object, Slick continues his career-long tradition of turning the overlooked into a bold visual narrative. His attention to detail in both form and wordplay makes this piece an extension of the graffiti wall, a flat surface alive with attitude, cultural shorthand, and layered contradiction. Edition Variation and Urban Artifact Value As with all HPM releases by OG Slick, each copy of Where The Hose M30 is one of a kind. While the base giclee ensures fidelity to the original digital layout, the embellishments disrupt that uniformity, introducing chaos, imperfection, and hand-executed energy. Some prints are saturated in pink or buffed out with white spray, while others are activated with directional burst marks and smudges of black ink. These choices give each collector a unique relationship to the piece, similar to how different graffiti tags evolve across the city depending on who sees them, alters them, or covers them. OG Slick captures that energy in a fixed format that still feels in flux. The deckled paper adds a tactile frame to the work, reinforcing its status as both high art and cultural subversion. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Where The Hose M30 stands as a sharply humorous yet technically refined work that reclaims public visual space and retools it with attitude, commentary, and urban soul.

    $2,500.00

  • Chekers Mixed Media Painting by Sechor

    Sechor Chekers Mixed Media Painting by Sechor

    Chekers Original One of a Kind Mixed-Media Spray Paint Painting Artwork on Wood Panel by Popular Street Graffiti Artist Sechor. 2019 Signed Mix Media on 16x30 on Unstretched Canvas

    $589.00

  • Sale -15% RR Crossing True Legend Original Street Sign Graffiti Painting by Cope2- Fernando Carlo

    Cope2- Fernando Carlo RR Crossing True Legend Original Street Sign Graffiti Painting by Cope2- Fernando Carlo

    RR Crossing- True Legend Original Mixed Media Painting graffiti artist modern pop art on Real Metal Street Sign by Cope2. Paint on Street Sign Size: 30 x 30 Inches Release: March 24, 2021 Run of: 1 During the mid-1990s Cope2 started slowly transitioning from the streets to the art scene of the galleries. At that time, street art was not as popular as it is in our days and the general public’s idea of it was still inextricably connected to ghettos, drug dealing, etc. The artist has never hidden his troubling past and avoids idealizing it, as a way to enhance his career and artistic persona. On the contrary, he mentions the following: “Oh man, there’s nothing to be proud of in hustling, but I had my first child at the age of 16, my son. So I had to make money to support him and his mother.

    $2,607.00 $2,216.00

  • My Shadows Got My Back Original Spray Paint Painting by Chris RWK

    Chris RWK- Robots Will Kill My Shadows Got My Back Original Spray Paint Painting by Chris RWK

    My Shadows Got My Back Original One of a Kind Mixed Media Spray Paint &b Acrylic Painting Artwork on Canvas by Popular Street Graffiti Artist Chris RWK. 2022 Signed Original 24x30 Canvas Painting A child of the 80s, Chris’ world was often completely flooded with the imagery and ideas presented by his television, his comic books, and the music and movies of the time. Immersed in these various mediums, Chris began to store the images brought forward though these everyday experiences in what he refers to as a “mental journal”.

    $3,645.00

Street Art Graffiti Pop Artwork

Origins and Evolution of Street Art

Street art, a vibrant facet of urban culture, has evolved from its origins as illicit graffiti to become a recognized form of public art that influences and is influenced by pop art and graffiti art. The term encompasses a variety of visual art forms created in public locations, typically outside of the traditional venues of art galleries or museums. The genesis of street art can be traced back to the graffiti movement of the 1960s and 1970s in New York City, where artists began using the urban landscape to express themselves outside the constraints of the art establishment. These early graffiti artists laid the foundation for street art by taking their work to the streets and marking buildings, subways, and billboards with their distinctive styles.

Transition from Graffiti to Street Art

As the movement grew, the scope of street art expanded. Artists began experimenting with different materials and techniques, including stencil graffiti, sticker art, wheat pasting, and street installations. The accessibility of street art, visible to all who pass by, challenged the notion that art should be confined to galleries and museums. Instead, it argued that it could be a form of communication and expression integrated into everyday life.

Street Art and Pop Art: A Symbiotic Relationship

The influence of pop art on street art is evident in the shared use of popular cultural imagery and the critique of consumerism. Pop art pioneers like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein borrowed from commercial art and advertising, much like street artists incorporate logos, branding, and cartoon characters into their work to comment on contemporary society.

Legal and Ethical Considerations

While street art has gained popularity and acceptance, the legality of unsanctioned work remains a contentious issue. Creating art in public spaces without permission is illegal in many jurisdictions, and yet, this transgressive nature gives street art some of its power. The debate over whether street art constitutes vandalism or public service highlights the ongoing tension between the artist's freedom of expression and the rights of property owners.

Street Art in the Digital Age

The rise of social media has played a significant role in the proliferation and democratization of street art. Platforms like Instagram have allowed street artists to share their work with a global audience, transcending the physical limitations of location. Digital photography and the internet have also enabled street art to be documented and preserved, countering its inherently ephemeral nature.

Impact on Culture and Society

Street art can uniquely engage with the community and reflect the social and political climate. Artists like Banksy, Shepard Fairey, and JR use street art to provoke thought and inspire conversation on topics ranging from war and peace to poverty and human rights. This engagement with broader societal issues elevates street art from mere decoration to a form of social commentary.

Commercialization and Mainstream Acceptance

As street art has become more mainstream, it has become more commercialized. This commercialization raises questions about the soul of street art. Can street art maintain its edge and authenticity when sold in galleries or commissioned by brands? This debate continues to shape the trajectory of street art as it becomes an increasingly accepted form of contemporary art. Street art, a dynamic and multifaceted form of creative expression, occupies a unique position at the intersection of visual art, cultural commentary, and public engagement. As it continues to evolve, the influence of street pop art and graffiti artwork on the cultural landscape is undeniable. It remains a powerful tool for artists to connect with the public, challenge societal norms, and push the boundaries of what is possible in art.
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© 2025 Sprayed Paint Art Collection,

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