Street Art

5 artworks

  • SECHOR train #2 - Sprayed Paint Art Collection

    Sechor SECHOR Train #2 Graffiti Sculpture by Sechor

    SECHOR train #2 Original Acrylic on HO Scale Model Train Box-Car Sculpture Artwork by graffiti street artist modern pop artist Sechor. 2021 Signed, 7x2 inches, Custom painted Vintage ho scale train with acrylic paint.

    $323.00

  • Hardcore Energy Original Spray Paint Marker Painting by Optimo NYC

    Optimo NYC Hardcore Energy Original Spray Paint Marker Painting by Optimo NYC

    Hardcore Energy Original Spray Paint Marker Painting by Optimo NYC One of a Kind Artwork on Fine Art Paper Street Art Pop Artist. 2022 Signed Magic Marker & Spray Paint Painting Original Artwork Size 7x9 Hardcore Energy by Optimo NYC – Original Spray Paint and Marker Artwork in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Hardcore Energy is a 2022 original 7 x 9 inch mixed media painting by Optimo NYC, created using spray paint and marker on fine art paper. This one-of-a-kind piece distills the essence of street presence and visual rhythm into a compact, raw, and stylized composition. The central figure is drawn with a minimalist elegance—defined by sharp, fluid marker lines that outline a faceless figure in a tall hat and coat. The phrase Hardcore Energy is written boldly across the chest, doubling as both a message and a visual anchor. The background pulses with a swirl of red, white, blue, and black spray paint, applied in layered motions that evoke aerosol mist, light reflection, and the raw dust of a late-night wall hit. The contrast between the soft haze of paint and the rigid black ink form captures the duality at the heart of graffiti—chaotic energy and stylized control. Visual Identity and Iconic Character Work Optimo NYC’s signature character, often seen in his street work and fine art pieces, returns here in refined linework. The top hat, angled shoulders, and long silhouette are unmistakable and iconic, calling back to mid-1980s New York street iconography while asserting a timeless visual presence. This figure appears detached yet commanding, anonymous yet memorable—a marker of both style and persona. The handwritten Hardcore Energy across the figure's chest is not a title but a pulse, vibrating with the spirit of the street and the momentum of New York graffiti lineage. The small triangle below the lettering further suggests a coded mark, emblematic of the way graffiti often carries layered meanings hidden in plain sight. Spray Technique and Urban Abstraction The spray paint background carries a rough elegance, with cloudy fades and directional bursts that ground the figure in atmosphere. Red and purple undertones swirl behind soft powdery whites, while black and silver speckles anchor the composition at its base. This layering is more than decorative—it replicates the texture of the city, the grime of asphalt, and the paint overspray found on buffed walls and metal surfaces. Optimo NYC blends these textures into a tight format, allowing the viewer to engage with an entire world of movement and mood in a 7 x 9 inch space. The composition never stands still; it hums with residual motion and the memory of action. New York Attitude in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Hardcore Energy is not a slogan, it is an ethos, and in this artwork, it defines the tone, composition, and visual voice of Optimo NYC. As an original signed piece by an artist with deep roots in graffiti culture, this work exists at the intersection of raw gesture and stylized iconography. The tight paper format amplifies its intensity rather than limiting it, turning every inch into a field of tension between abstraction and symbolism. For collectors and followers of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, this piece offers not only an image but a flash of the culture’s speed, stance, and coded energy. It is an authentic visual object powered by the street’s unfiltered rhythm and the artist’s sharpened instinct.

    $350.00

  • Supreme Montana Cans Mini Can Set Spray Paint Artwork by Montana MTN

    Supreme Supreme Montana Cans Mini Can Set Spray Paint Artwork by Montana MTN

    Supreme Montana Cans Mini Can Set Limited Edition Rare Spray Paint Can Artwork Crossover by famous graffiti paint maker Montana MTN. 2021 Limited Edition Set of six 1.7 oz spray paint cans with printed logos. 3.5" height with 1.3" radius. Sold as a set, made exclusively for Supreme. In a striking meld of street credibility and high-end fashion, the Supreme Montana Cans Mini Can Set emerges as a testament to the expansive influence of street culture in contemporary aesthetics. Launched in 2021, this collection represents a partnership between Supreme, a brand synonymous with the intersection of counterculture and luxury, and Montana MTN, a stalwart in the graffiti art supplies industry. The limited edition set features six 1.7 oz spray paint cans, each standing at a height of 3.5 inches with a radius of 1.3 inches. The vibrancy of the colors—blue, yellow, gray, pink, and the iconic Supreme red—mirror the eclectic palette often found in urban graffiti art, making the set an attractive piece for collectors and enthusiasts of street art and pop culture. This collaboration indicates the ever-evolving landscape of pop art, where the convergence of utilitarian objects and artistic expression forms a new narrative. Supreme's bold logos printed on the miniature Montana cans speak a language of urban artistry and exclusivity, attributes highly regarded in both street art circles and the high fashion domain. These cans, while fully functional, transcend their primary purpose of painting to become collectible artworks in their own right. They are sold as a cohesive set, underscoring the idea that their value is compounded not just by their rarity but by their association with the cultural zeitgeist. By creating these cans exclusively for Supreme, Montana MTN ensures that this crossover resonates with a sense of scarcity and unique appeal. These are not just tools for creating art but are themselves a statement, a symbolic nod to the culture from which they've been born, and a reflection of the world they decorate. In the hands of enthusiasts, these cans hold the potential to unleash creativity. At the same time, in the eyes of collectors, they stand as a representation of a cultural fusion that has come to define a generation. Such collaborations are milestones marking the journey of street art from the peripheries into the mainstream. This journey continues to challenge and redefine the boundaries between everyday objects and fine art.

    $275.00

  • All City Legends Original Spray Paint Marker Painting by Optimo NYC

    Optimo NYC All City Legends Original Spray Paint Marker Painting by Optimo NYC

    All City Legends Original Spray Paint Marker Painting by Optimo NYC One of a Kind Artwork on Fine Art Paper Street Art Pop Artist. 2022 Signed Magic Marker & Spray Paint Painting Original Artwork Size 7x9 All City Legends by Optimo NYC – Original Spray Paint and Marker Artwork in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork All City Legends is a 2022 original spray paint and magic marker painting by Optimo NYC, created on 7 x 9 inch fine art paper. This one-of-a-kind artwork channels the spirit of graffiti’s highest honor—being all city—through a minimalist figure, a coded phrase, and the layered textures of urban motion. The central character, sketched in Optimo’s unmistakable flowing linework, wears a long overcoat and a top hat, a stylized presence recurring throughout his body of work. The words All City Legends are hand-tagged across the figure’s torso in a bold script, merging the figure and text into a single symbol of reputation, movement, and myth. The background features soft gradients of red, purple, blue, and white spray, crossing diagonally like streaks of transit light or echoes of aerosol motion. It evokes the atmospheric haze of graffiti-covered stations and freight yards while retaining an abstract clarity grounded in fine art composition. Stylized Characters and Graffiti Symbolism Optimo NYC’s top-hatted character is more than just a recurring figure—it’s an icon of identity and presence, a symbol of street authority rendered in gesture and attitude. The figure’s facelessness speaks to the anonymity of graffiti culture, where names are known but faces often remain hidden behind masks, movement, or myth. In this piece, the figure stands tall and silent, its outline sharp against the misty color field. The phrase All City down the chest is not only a declaration but a tribute to those writers who reached every borough, every line, every wall. It speaks to saturation, fame, and the visual rhythm of a name repeated across the surfaces of a metropolis. Optimo honors this code with reverence, blending the language of graffiti hierarchy into the poetics of visual restraint. Spray Texture, Motion, and Energy Flow The background in All City Legends carries the energy of transit and repetition. Sprayed diagonals of soft pastel hues collide with layers of black and white speckling near the base of the paper, creating the sensation of speed and layered movement. These textures don’t just frame the character—they suggest environment, memory, and kinetic urgency. Optimo’s work frequently relies on this balance of motion and control, with paint applied in spontaneous arcs while linework remains deliberate and surgical. The tension between these techniques mirrors the graffiti process itself—fast, focused, unpredictable yet precise. Every gradient, overspray, and drop in this piece reflects the raw materials of the city reassembled into fine art vocabulary. Graffiti Respect and Street Pop Art Narrative All City Legends encapsulates Optimo NYC’s unique ability to honor tradition while advancing the form. As a contributor to New York’s graffiti lineage, he infuses every work with a respect for codes, status, and style evolution. This painting is a quiet yet commanding tribute to those who earned visibility not through hype but through coverage, through citywide impact built one tag at a time. The size may be intimate, but the message is expansive. It is a personal homage and a public archive, a visual whisper that echoes the roar of subway tunnels and rooftops. In the landscape of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, Optimo’s All City Legends stands as a refined tribute to names that rode steel and owned cities—art made with line, spirit, and the hardcore memory of motion.

    $350.00

  • Coronavirus Quarantine Slap-Up Label Sticker Original Tag Art by Saber

    Saber Coronavirus Quarantine Slap-Up Label Sticker Original Tag Art by Saber

    Coronavirus Quarantine Multi Tagged Original Slap-Up Label Marker Painting/Drawing Art on Warning Label by Tru Graffiti Legend Saber Urban Street Artist. 2020 Signed Marker Original Coronavirus Quarantine Yellow Biohazard Slap Up Graffiti Art Tag 7x5 Multi Tagged on High Visibility Virus Covid-19 Warning Label Red, Purple & Silver Marker. Confronting a Global Crisis through Street Pop Art The 'Coronavirus Quarantine' multi-tagged original slap-up label marker painting/drawing by the urban street artist Saber captures the zeitgeist of an era dominated by the pandemic. This 2020 signed marker original is more than a piece of graffiti artwork; it is a historical document that encapsulates a moment when the world grappled with the unprecedented challenge of COVID-19. Saber, known for his influential role in the graffiti art scene, takes a high-visibility yellow biohazard slap-up label, a symbol now ubiquitously associated with the virus, and transforms it into a canvas. The dimensions of the work, 7x5 inches, might seem modest, but the impact of the art could be better. Through his use of vibrant and chaotic tags that overlay the stark warning of 'Coronavirus Quarantine,' Saber disrupts the alarming message of the label, inviting contemplation on the nature of the pandemic that extends beyond fear and caution. The piece is a profound commentary on global affairs during the COVID-19 crisis. The graffiti artist's tags subverted the choice to use a warning label, a helpful object designed to communicate danger and command obedience. The tags, often considered an act of defiance in public spaces, here challenge the narrative of the pandemic by bringing an individualistic and human touch to the impersonal and clinical warning label. Impact of Saber's Art in the Context of Street Pop Art In the context of street pop art, Saber's 'Coronavirus Quarantine' piece stands out as a poignant reflection of the times. Street art has always had the unique ability to engage with its audience directly and urgently. In this instance, the art serves as a visual expression of the collective angst, confusion, and resilience experienced during the quarantine periods. Saber's artwork, juxtaposing the form of formal, almost anarchic graffiti tags, speaks to the unchecked nature of the public's response to the pandemic—order and disorder, compliance and rebellion. 2020 will be remembered for its seismic shifts in global health, economies, and societies. In this climate, street pop art and graffiti artwork like Saber's serve as markers of resistance and reminders of human endurance. The biohazard slap-up label, once a mere functional sign, is recontextualized as a piece of art that provokes, questions, and endures, much like the human spirit during the trials of the pandemic. Saber, the American artist behind this impactful work, has once again demonstrated why he is regarded as a legend in the graffiti world. His ability to take the pulse of society and translate it into art that is both provocative and reflective ensures that his work remains relevant and resonant, not just within the street art community but also among those who encounter his art in the very public spaces that the coronavirus pandemic has so markedly changed.

    $70.00

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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