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Marwan Shahin High Time- High All Day Giclee Print by Marwan Shahin
High Time- High All Day Artwork Giclee Limited Edition Print on Photographique Rag Paper by Pop Culture Graffiti Artist Marwan Shahin. Marwan Shahin's "High All Day" Collectors edition of only 5 prints of each. From High Time series, Debuting in 2015, Released for the first time produced by Shahin Studios, released in celebration of the new year. Only 5 Available of each2015 18 inches x 22 inches Giclée on Photographique Rag Signed, Numbered, Embossed and Branded High Time: High All Day by Marwan Shahin – A Radiant Fusion of Time, Status, and Enlightenment High All Day is a standout piece from Marwan Shahin’s acclaimed High Time series, crafted in 2015 and released in an extremely limited edition of only five prints. Produced on 18 x 22 inch Photographique Rag paper and finished with Shahin’s signature embossing, branding, and numbering, this giclée print extends the series’ surreal reinterpretation of luxury timepieces as profound cultural and symbolic artifacts. In High All Day, Shahin replaces the watch dial with a celestial face encircled by golden rays, transforming the wristwatch into a sun deity—a visual metaphor for illumination, opulence, and modern obsessions with visibility and value. The radiant gold of the spiked bezel bursts outward like a sun crown, each point merging elements of a timepiece's mechanics with solar symbolism. At the center of the dial, the intricately detailed face gazes out hypnotically with spiral-rendered features and reddened eyes, echoing the dreamy haze found in High All Night. However, where High All Night explores the twilight haze of indulgence, High All Day evokes the blinding clarity of the spotlight—fame, materialism, and constant awareness. Time as Power, Time as Currency Marwan Shahin continues his exploration of modern symbolism through the framework of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The work critiques the societal glorification of luxury, fame, and hyper-productivity. The gilded wristwatch—a universal symbol of affluence and achievement—is elevated into a mythic idol, reminiscent of both solar gods and corporate logos. The crown at the top of the watch dial references Rolex, reinforcing the link between luxury branding and cultural deification. This stylized anthropomorphization of the timepiece underscores the duality of time as both liberator and captor. The spiraling background, rendered in precise linework, creates a kinetic energy around the figure. The radial blue field suggests motion, light, and expansion, as if the sun-like figure is actively emitting influence. This energy resonates with Shahin’s intent to depict how fame and status radiate outward—both elevating and consuming those who orbit them. Graffiti Philosophy Meets Symbolic Precision As with the rest of the High Time series, High All Day is grounded in a meticulously detailed aesthetic. The symmetry of the design, the geometric rhythm of the band, and the finely etched facial features show Shahin’s background in architecture and classical draftsmanship. Yet it remains rooted in street pop culture through bold iconography and visual commentary. The glowing red eyes signal both fatigue and vigilance, implying that in today’s digital age, even daylight is infused with the pressure to perform and stay visible. This piece pushes the viewer to consider how contemporary society equates time with productivity, productivity with value, and visibility with validation. In this way, High All Day not only satirizes luxury watches but transforms them into a canvas for spiritual and sociopolitical critique. A Daylight Manifesto in Giclée Form Marwan Shahin’s High All Day serves as a radiant counterpoint to High All Night, reflecting the relentless pulse of daytime hustle and social exposure. With only five prints ever made, it offers rarity that mirrors the exclusivity it critiques. Both sacred and satirical, it merges ancient sun symbolism with modern material culture, making it a powerful artifact for collectors of contemporary street pop art. Through High All Day, Shahin continues his exploration of the ways humans personify time, idolize wealth, and seek transcendence through possession.
$352.00
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Sam Taylor Untitled UltraGiclée Print by Sam Taylor
Untitled UltraGiclée Print by Sam Taylor Artwork Limited Edition Print on SIHL Ivory White Matt Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2022 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 300 Artwork Size 22x22 Bape 30th Anniversary Collection Sam Taylor, a highly acclaimed illustrator, is renowned for his distinctive style featuring bold line work, vibrant colors, and playful character designs infused with a variety of pop culture references. Taylor's work is infused with humor and energy, making it a joy to behold. Additionally, his creations are intimately connected with the everyday experiences of people.
$533.00
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Brett Crawford Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe Giclee Print by Brett Crawford
Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe Giclee Print by Brett Crawford Artwork Limited Edition Print on Somerset Fine Art Paper Graffiti Pop Street Artist. 2018 Signed & Numbered Limited Edition of 50 Artwork Size 22x22. Crease in upper left margin. Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe by Brett Crawford – Identity, Irony, and Flight in Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe is a 2018 limited edition giclee print by American artist Brett Crawford, printed on Somerset fine art paper in a 22 x 22 inch format. Released in a signed and numbered edition of 50, the work showcases Crawford’s signature mix of realism, parody, and surrealism within the context of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork. The central figure is a chimpanzee outfitted in red gloves, a superhero-style mask, and a bright yellow backpack adorned with pop culture patches. Perched atop a floating astronaut helmet in a sky of clouds and soft gradients, the chimp raises a peace sign as it gazes out from a dreamlike elevation. Every detail, from the fur texture to the sheen of the helmet and the subtle gleam in the eyes, is carefully rendered, blending classical painting discipline with the irreverent humor and cultural remixing that defines Crawford’s visual language. Visual Wordplay and the Challenge of Classification The title Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe, which translates to this is not a monkey, borrows from René Magritte’s surrealist phrase while introducing questions of identity, misrepresentation, and context. Crawford toys with both literal and symbolic interpretation. The chimpanzee, a common stand-in for human behavior and scientific curiosity, becomes a layered character—a rebel, a child, a cosmonaut, and a cultural echo all in one. The use of a non-human protagonist, paired with human accessories and posturing, challenges viewers to rethink what symbols actually represent. Within Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork, where iconography is constantly reinterpreted and re-contextualized, Crawford’s work finds power in absurdity. The message is not defined, but rather delivered through tone, detail, and visual contradiction. Technical Precision and Symbolic Density Crafted using high-resolution giclee printing, Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe achieves remarkable depth, ensuring every hair on the chimp’s body, every glint on the backpack’s surface, and every cloud in the sky is faithfully reproduced. Somerset fine art paper provides a soft, velvety base that enhances the vibrancy of Crawford’s color palette. The artist’s command of light and surface texture brings photographic clarity to fantastical subjects, allowing each symbolic element to register visually before it registers conceptually. The chimp’s backpack features patches referencing pop culture—such as the masked raccoon and animated faces—inviting interpretation while anchoring the piece in a shared visual lexicon. Brett Crawford’s Commentary on Adventure, Persona, and Urban Mythology Brett Crawford’s visual narratives frequently place hybrid creatures or anthropomorphic characters in surreal or heroic contexts. In Ceci n'est Pas Un Singe, this figure is both explorer and joke, astronaut and outcast. Its peace sign gesture undercuts the seriousness of the title while enhancing the mystery of its intent. The floating helmet below it evokes flight, exploration, or perhaps abandonment. With no ground in sight, the figure is literally and metaphorically suspended. This print, like much of Crawford’s work, distills humor, reflection, and spectacle into a single moment. It speaks through suggestion rather than statement, a hallmark of Street Pop Art & Graffiti Artwork where visual power is amplified by cultural fragments, attitude, and the unexpected. Crawford’s chimp is not just a character—it is an avatar of exploration, uncertainty, and transformation.
$850.00