Street & Road
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Montana MTN Med TCS TuffCityStyles Ultramarine Blue Spray Paint Can Artwork by Montana MTN
Med TC5 Ultramarine Blue Spray Paint Can Artwork by Montana MTN Limited Edition Artist Paint Crossover Graffiti Street Object Art. 2013 Signed Printed Med TCS TuffCityStyles Ultramarine Blue Color Limited Edition of 500 Spray Paint Can with Custom Wood Box Object Artwork Size 3x8 Montana MTN Filled with Paint. Med TC5 Ultramarine Blue Spray Paint Can by Montana MTN The Med TC5 Ultramarine Blue Spray Paint Can is a 2013 limited-edition art object that encapsulates the raw pulse of graffiti history, urban storytelling, and New York street identity. Produced by Montana Colors (MTN) in collaboration with Med from the legendary graffiti crew The Crazy 5 (TC5), this can is far more than a utilitarian object. It is a street pop art & graffiti artwork that celebrates the cultural memory of subway art and the spirit of aerosol expression that surged from the boroughs of New York and redefined global aesthetics. Packaged in a custom wood box, the object combines collectible design with underground authenticity, inviting a new generation of collectors to witness the graffiti movement's evolution from subway tunnels to fine art presentations. Med TC5 and the Legacy of Subway Writing Fernando Carlo Jr., known as Cope2, was a contemporary of Med TC5 and part of the same New York graffiti culture that transformed the Five Boroughs into a living canvas. Med is a pivotal figure of TC5, one of the most iconic graffiti crews formed in the 1970s and still revered today. Known for bombing subway trains, Med’s work represents the original wildstyle lettering and character-driven narratives that became visual signatures of the movement. This limited-edition can features a blue-and-silver subway car illustration, number 5 Bronx-bound, adorned with bubble tags, stylized graffiti arrows, and the unmistakable energy of the TC5 crew. The presence of the Tuff City name — a tribute to the Bronx-based graffiti supply and gallery hub — further anchors this piece in NYC history, merging the visual language of the street with the collectability of fine art. Street Pop Art Meets Historic Graffiti Design Montana MTN’s 400ml spray cans have long been associated with collaborations between graffiti legends and street pop art visionaries. With the Med TC5 Ultramarine Blue release, the can becomes a symbol of both the medium and the message — a tool for rebellion turned artifact of cultural recognition. The layered iconography, from its intricate train design to the hand-drawn NY-style characters and bubble text, reflects the visual grammar of the Bronx graffiti style that exploded during the 1980s and matured into global influence. This edition of 500 was carefully printed and labeled to retain that rough edge that graffiti purists admire, while the artist’s visual clarity ensures each can stands as a collectible artwork on its own merit. Montana MTN and the Preservation of Urban Culture Montana Colors continues to push the boundaries of how street pop art & graffiti artwork is collected and remembered. These limited-edition cans provide an archival structure for graffiti history, preserving the story of the artists, crews, and visual innovations that shaped the global street movement. The Med TC5 Ultramarine Blue edition stands as a timeless homage to graffiti’s golden age and its enduring influence on design, fashion, and fine art. With only 500 units ever produced, each can becomes an emblem of New York’s artistic resistance, immortalized through bold color and the unstoppable vision of an original train bomber.
$300.00
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Cope2- Fernando Carlo 33rd Street Station Archival Print by Cope2- Fernando Carlo
33rd Street Station Archival Pigment Fine Art Limited Edition Print on 290gsm Moab Entrada Paper by Modern Pop Street Graffiti Artist Cope2. Signed & Numbered Archival Pigment Print on 290gsm Moab Fine Art Paper Size: 31.5 x 18 Inches Release: March 11, 2020 Run of: 100 Cope2 has always shown his respect for the writers before him and in his first steps in the world of graffiti, he was interested in learning from them. This is the way he described his first encounter with them in an interview with Widewalls in 2006: “When I started, to see these graffitis one subway cars was great – the colors, the letters – I wanted to learn from the original artists, not just copy. New York is the motherland of graffiti, I am part of the second generation and I wanted to get my special style.”
$352.00