Street Art

3 artworks

  • Rabbit Worries Original Wood Panel Spray Painting by Blake Jones

    Blake Jones Rabbit Worries Original Wood Panel Spray Painting by Blake Jones

    Rabbit Worries Original Wood Panel Spray Painting by Blake JonesOne of a Kind Artwork Street Art Pop Artist. 2020 Signed Spray Paint on Wood Panel Painting Original Artwork Size 20.5x48 Rabbit Worries by Blake Jones – Raw Expression on Wood in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Rabbit Worries is a 2020 one-of-a-kind original spray painting by American artist Blake Jones, executed in bold red on a reclaimed wood panel surface measuring 20.5 x 48 inches. The work showcases Jones’s iconic rabbit character, a figure that has become a recurring motif throughout his visual storytelling. Painted with a direct, unfiltered approach, this piece combines the urgency of street tagging with the aesthetic clarity of pop iconography. The character’s expression—eyes closed, mouth curved into an uneasy smile, eyebrows subtly arched—embodies a quiet tension. Its body, simplified to flowing lines and minimalist form, radiates both humor and unease. The word BLAKE appears scrawled at the bottom in matching red, affirming the artist’s authorship with the immediacy of a street signature. Emotive Simplicity and Symbolic Power Jones’s rabbit is not merely a cartoon—it is a vessel for emotional resonance. In Rabbit Worries, the figure’s design is stripped to its essentials, allowing for maximum psychological impact through minimal visual information. The expressive red spray paint against the natural wood grain forms a stark contrast, amplifying the raw emotion captured in the figure’s posture and facial cues. The vertical format of the panel heightens the intensity, drawing the eye upward through the body to the ears, which echo symbols of alertness or anxiety. This approach exemplifies a foundational strategy in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork: communicate fast, speak loud, and make every line count. Spray Paint and Surface as Urban Code The use of spray paint on wood panel connects directly to graffiti tradition, where the tool and the texture inform the voice of the work. The grain of the wood remains fully visible beneath the red lines, allowing natural imperfection and urban grit to coexist with the graphic energy of Jones’s imagery. Unlike canvas or paper, wood offers resistance and character, creating a dialogue between material and message. Jones capitalizes on this, allowing the surface to influence the mood of the piece. The bold red color evokes urgency and vulnerability, echoing themes of personal struggle, performance anxiety, or internal conflict. The mark-making is fast, almost instinctual—reflecting the rhythms of street tagging but contained within a formal composition. Blake Jones and the Intersection of Humor, Anxiety, and Public Voice Blake Jones continues to explore themes of emotional identity and public language through recurring figures and familiar expressions. In Rabbit Worries, he captures a moment of introspection through a symbol usually associated with innocence and mischief. This rabbit, however, is not carefree—it carries weight in its closed eyes and curled lips, offering viewers a reflection of shared mental space. The piece speaks to the pressures of contemporary life through the language of cartoon abstraction, grounding pop visual cues in real emotional terrain. As part of the Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork canon, Rabbit Worries is a striking example of how character and gesture can replace narrative, how urgency can be beautiful, and how anxiety can find voice in color and line. This artwork stands as both an object of aesthetic clarity and a portrait of psychological complexity.

    $2,500.00

  • Strapped Original Acrylic SPray Paint Painting by KayLove

    KayLove Strapped Original Acrylic SPray Paint Painting by KayLove

    Strapped Original Acrylic SPray Paint Painting by KayLove One of a Kind Artwork on Canvas by Street Art Pop Artist. 2024 Signed Acrylic & Spray Paint Painting Original Artwork Size 24x48 Strapped by KayLove – Original Acrylic and Spray Paint Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Strapped is a 2024 one-of-a-kind original painting by KayLove, executed with acrylic and spray paint on a large-format 24 x 48 inch canvas. The artwork features a central nude female figure rendered with stylized curves, flowing brown hair, and symbolic buckles, standing confidently atop a wave-like base of lavender and white. Set against a stark white background energized by blocks of red, blue, and orange spray patterns, the composition is surrounded by graffiti tags in pink, green, blue, and yellow. The piece functions as a powerful visual dialogue on identity, vulnerability, empowerment, and expression. With her head tilted downward, eyes closed, and hands positioned assertively on her hips and thigh, the figure embodies poise and presence. KayLove uses line and color not only to define form, but to amplify message. Feminine Form as Resistance and Radiance Strapped speaks directly to the role of the body in public and private space, particularly as it relates to women and femme-presenting individuals navigating the gaze, restriction, and autonomy. The straps that crisscross the figure’s upper arm and thighs are not instruments of constraint—they are symbols of armor, resilience, and self-possession. They act as coded references to the ways in which Black and Brown women often must guard and assert their presence within dominant visual culture. The stylized form leans into exaggeration and softness simultaneously, challenging viewers to reevaluate how the body is often read through a hyper-sexualized or objectified lens. Here, the body is sovereign, expressive, and sacred. The confident stance, curved linework, and closed eyes suggest peace within power, control within exposure. Layered Graffiti as Commentary and Community Around the central figure, tags erupt across the canvas in a multicolored array, overlaying parts of the figure and base in classic graffiti fashion. These tags are not random—they function as visual voices that layer the composition with meaning. They evoke both interruption and affirmation, suggesting the street’s chaotic visual noise while amplifying a communal call to witness, affirm, and engage. In Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, layering tags over form is a form of reclamation, and in Strapped, it reads like a collective presence—others bearing witness, shouting names, claiming space around the body. The use of vibrant pastels over earth tones adds contrast and dynamism, pulling the viewer between intimacy and intensity. KayLove’s Fusion of Narrative, Culture, and Street Aesthetic Strapped is emblematic of KayLove’s broader body of work, where cultural iconography, spiritual introspection, and graffiti collide. Her use of clean brush strokes layered with raw spray textures speaks to her ability to navigate between muralism, fine art, and traditional graffiti without diluting the impact of any one approach. The figure is not merely a muse or symbol—it is a stand-in for all who carry layers of history, resistance, and beauty while standing tall in the face of erasure. Through this canvas, KayLove continues her legacy of giving voice to the unseen, crafting pieces that function as both aesthetic and affirmation. Strapped stands as a celebration of the feminine form, the complexity of being, and the graffiti writer’s right to mark, claim, and express without apology.

    $750.00

  • Sale -15% Eyes Like Those Original Spray Paint Acrylic Painting by Indie184- Soraya Marquez

    Indie184- Soraya Marquez Eyes Like Those Original Spray Paint Acrylic Painting by Indie184- Soraya Marquez

    Eyes Like Those Original One of a Kind Mixed Media Spray Paint Collage Painting Artwork on Stretched Canvas by Pop Artist Indie184- Soraya Marquez. 2017 Signed Original One of a Kind Painting Size 35.5x48 Unlined canvas.

    $3,259.00 $2,770.00

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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